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“Pain” means something different to us all. When speaking of pain in clinical practice, we tend to think about the management of it, the varying levels of analgesic strength, and the opioid crisis. A big indicator of one’s risk for pain medication underprescription is race. Ethnic minorities are routinely underprescribed opioids for pain management due to a host of stereotypes. Clinicians have a duty to continue to reject the stereotypes that lead to this sort of overlooking of vulnerable populations. In this episode we have Quinnipiac University Physician Assistant student Simon Ebbott and UConn School of Dental Medicine student Basant Sallam interviewing Kimberly Tschetter, PA-C (Alum of UST/AHEC Scholars Program Cohort 5 and the PA faculty for UST and current UConn Health PA).
This episode was edited by Basant Sallam
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“Pain” means something different to us all. When speaking of pain in clinical practice, we tend to think about the management of it, the varying levels of analgesic strength, and the opioid crisis. A big indicator of one’s risk for pain medication underprescription is race. Ethnic minorities are routinely underprescribed opioids for pain management due to a host of stereotypes. Clinicians have a duty to continue to reject the stereotypes that lead to this sort of overlooking of vulnerable populations. In this episode we have Quinnipiac University Physician Assistant student Simon Ebbott and UConn School of Dental Medicine student Basant Sallam interviewing Kimberly Tschetter, PA-C (Alum of UST/AHEC Scholars Program Cohort 5 and the PA faculty for UST and current UConn Health PA).
This episode was edited by Basant Sallam