A Painful Truth: LGBTQ+ Adults Report Higher Rates of Pain

Chronic Pain Stress Concept Illustration

A new research study reveals that LGBTQ+ adults experience higher levels of pain compared to straight adults. Western sociology professor Anna Zajacova suggests that pain can serve as an overall holistic measure of physical and psychological well-being at the population level. Researchers found that psychological distress was the factor most strongly linked to the higher prevalence of pain in LGBTQ+ groups, while socioeconomic status and healthcare covariates played only modest roles. The authors believe that stigma and discrimination faced by LGBTQ+ individuals may increase their risk of pain and call for additional research to better understand and address these disparities.

Western University sociology professor says pain can be used as an overall holistic measure of physical and psychological well-being at the population level.

A new study analyzing data from the 2013 – 2018 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) has found that the number of people who report being in pain is significantly higher among LGBTQ+ adults than straight adults.

Western sociology professor Anna Zajacova said pain has not been studied from a population perspective in the past because it was assumed to be a symptom of something else.

“However, chronic pain is now widely understood as a condition in its own right. It’s an important condition, too, given its high burden in the population and tremendous impact individuals’ quality of life,” said Zajacova, a co-author on the study recently published in the journal Pain. “In fact, we view pain as an overall holistic measure of physical and psychological well-being at the population level.”

The analysis was conducted by researchers from Western, the University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Michigan State University, Ohio State University, and National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. The researchers found LGBTQ+ adults (those who self-identified in the National Health Interview Survey as gay, lesbian, bisexual or “something else”) reported markedly higher levels of pain.

The results showed that compared with straight adults, gay and lesbian adults had a 47 percent higher prevalence of pain and a 33 percent higher prevalence of chronic pain, bisexual adults had a 105 percent higher prevalence of pain and an 88 percent higher prevalence of chronic pain, and adults who identified as “something else” on the survey had a 133 percent higher prevalence of pain and an 89 percent higher prevalence of chronic pain.

Of the other factors examined, the one most strongly linked with higher prevalence of pain in LGBTQ+ groups was psychological distress. Socioeconomic status and health care covariates played only modest roles, which were not statistically significant.

“These findings highlight the importance of psychosocial inputs and supports that seem to be driving a lot of the differences,” Zajacova said.

The authors suggest the stigma and discrimination faced by members of these groups may increase the risk of pain. They called for additional research to develop a fuller understanding of pain disparities by sexual identity, with the ultimate goal of eliminating disparities and reducing pain to achieve better health and well-being.

The authors stress this kind of data collection is important in the Canadian context as well.

“I suspect we might see similar patterns in Canada despite it being more advanced in terms of sociolegal acceptance of LGBTQ+ adults, because what we are seeing seems to hint at the psychosocial issues that may be influencing higher prevalence of pain,” Zajacova said.

The data used in this analysis are for adults aged 18 to 64 who participated in the 2013–2018 waves of the NHIS. They also answered questions about chronic pain, defined in the survey as having pain most days or every day in the past three months (2013–2015 and 2018) or six months (2016 and 2017) and pain at three or more sites (defined as positive responses to questions about three or more of the following: low-back pain, neck pain, severe headache or migraine, facial or jaw ache or pain, and persistent joint pain). Data were also collected on a variety of other factors such as socioeconomic characteristics, health behaviors, and psychological distress.

Reference: “Chronic pain among U.S. sexual minority adults who identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or ‘something else'” by Anna Zajacova, Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, Hui Liu, Rin Reczek, Richard L Nahin, 30 March 2023, Pain.
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002891

3 Comments on "A Painful Truth: LGBTQ+ Adults Report Higher Rates of Pain"

  1. The study did not find, report, quantify, or qualify “stigma and discrimination…or sociolegal acceptance”, so these potential factors are being pulled from somewhere inside Zajacova’s person.

    Actually relevant might be any activities or injuries related to these sexualities which could cause pain. The study did find “psychological distress” as a cause, which is distressing, as that is the new euphemism for mental disorder. The actual study finding is that “LGBTQ+ Adults” have “psychological distress” making them report higher pain. This corroborates other studies correlating a higher incidence of mental disorders, as well as ample evidence that mental disorders lead to higher incidence of pain. Instead of continuing on new studies correlating that, studies on causation/prevention/medication would be more useful, as it could lead to treatments. Otherwise, I would argue continued repetition of these correlating studies is creating a stigma.

  2. More pain due to lower tolerance levels….. especially for any opinion differing from theirs.

  3. Some heterosexuals might exhibit excess pain due to a closet condition, even from themselves.

Leave a Reply to Sam Cancel reply

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.