Ian Chen
Eastern Virginia Medical School
6 Papers
1 Citations
Ian Chen is an academic researcher from Eastern Virginia Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Pain catastrophizing. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use by Primary Care Patients with Chronic Pain
Eric I. Rosenberg,Inginia Genao,Ian Chen,Alex J. Mechaber,Jo Ann Wood,Charles Faselis,James Kurz,Madhu Menon,Jane E O'rorke,Mukta Panda,Mark E. Pasanen,Lisa J. Staton,Diane Calleson,Samuel Cykert +13 more
TL;DR: Complementary and alternative therapies were popular among patients with chronic pain disorders surveyed in academic primary care settings and when asked to choose between traditional therapies or CAM, most patients still preferred traditional therapies for pain relief.
The Influence of Discordance in Pain Assessment on the Functional Status of Patients with Chronic Nonmalignant Pain
Mukta Panda,Mukta Panda,Lisa J. Staton,Ian Chen,James Kurz,Jane E O'rorke,Mark E. Pasanen,Mark E. Pasanen,Madhusudan Menon,Inginia Genao,JoAnn Wood,Alex J. Mechaber,Eric I. Rosenberg,Charles Faselis,Tim Carey,Diane Calleson,Samuel Cykert +16 more
TL;DR: Patients with chronic, nonmalignant pain have poor physical functioning and worse bodily pain, and discordance, obesity, and depression are other modifiable factors.
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Racial differences in opioid use for chronic nonmalignant pain.
Ian Chen,James Kurz,Mark E. Pasanen,Charles Faselis,Mukta Panda,Lisa J. Staton,Jane E O'rorke,Madhusudan Menon,Inginia Genao,JoAnn Wood,Alex J. Mechaber,Eric I. Rosenberg,Tim Carey,Diane Calleson,Samuel Cykert +14 more
TL;DR: There is growing evidence that disparities in the treatment of pain occur because of differences in race, and this work aims to address this issue.
•Journal Article
When race matters: disagreement in pain perception between patients and their physicians in primary care.
Lisa J. Staton,Mukta Panda,Ian Chen,Inginia Genao,James Kurz,Mark E. Pasanen,Alex J. Mechaber,Madhusudan Menon,Jane E O'rorke,JoAnn Wood,Eric I. Rosenberg,Charles Faeslis,Tim Carey,Diane Calleson,Samuel Cykert +14 more
TL;DR: It is found that physicians are twice as likely to underestimate pain in blacks patients compared to all other ethnicities combined and a qualitative study exploring why physicians rate blacks patients' pain low is warranted.