# Associations of discrimination and pain among older adults: Results from the Einstein Aging Study

**Authors:** Linying Ji, Monique Balthazar, Yuqi Shen, Margeaux Gray, Richard Lipton, Jennifer Graham-Engeland, Carol Derby, Orfeu Buxton

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3416 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study finds that experiences of discrimination are linked to increased pain reports in older adults, with differences based on race and sex.

## Contribution

The study reveals how discrimination frequency and reasons for discrimination uniquely affect pain outcomes across race and sex groups in older adults.

## Key findings

- Discrimination frequency is associated with pain interference in women and peak pain in Black participants.
- Number of reasons for discrimination is more strongly linked to pain outcomes in Black participants.
- Discrimination associations with pain differ by race and sex, with stronger effects in women and Black individuals.

## Abstract

Chronic pain among older adults varies by race and sex, suggesting the value of examining social determinants (e.g. discrimination) that may drive pain-related outcomes. We examined how discriminatory experiences influence pain reported in daily life and whether those associations vary by race and sex. Participants (N = 296, M_age=77.5 years, 69% women; 46% nonhispanic White, 41% nonhispanic Black, 13% Hispanic/other) are from the Einstein Aging Study. Using ambulatory mobile assessments (6 daily, 2 weeks), person-level average scores were estimated for pain intensity ( mean level, peak), pain interference with cognition (PIC), pain interference with function (PIF). A modified Williams’ Everyday Discrimination questionnaire assessed the frequency and number of reasons for discrimination. Linear regressions, stratified by race and sex, were used to test associations between pain and discrimination, controlling for age, education, BMI, pain medication use, and chronic diseases. Among women, discrimination frequency was associated with PIF; number of reasons for discrimination was associated with average pain intensity and PIF. For men, discrimination frequency was associated with PIC. Among Blacks, discrimination frequency was associated with peak pain and PIC; number of reasons for discrimination was associated with pain intensity and PIF. For White participants, discrimination frequency (not number of reasons for discrimination) was associated with average pain intensity, PIC, and PIF. Discriminatory experiences are associated with increased pain reports that differ by race and sex. Discriminatory experiences had stronger associations with pain for women than men. Number of reported reasons for discriminatory experiences was more strongly associated with pain outcomes in Black participants.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762145