Pubdate: Sun, 09 Apr 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Denise Grady DESCRIMINATION IS PAINFUL. IT CAN ALSO BE AGONIZING A study titled "We Don't Carry That" suggests that people who need medication for severe pain may have trouble getting it if they live in neighborhoods that are mostly black, Hispanic or Asian. A survey of 347 pharmacies in New York City, conducted by the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, found that in nonwhite neighborhoods only 25 percent of pharmacies carried enough morphine or morphine-like drugs to treat severe pain; in white neighborhoods, 72 percent did. Interviews with doctors and pharmacists in Los Angeles and the Midwest suggested similar problems there. Half the druggists blamed low demand, saying they could not afford to stock items that customers did not buy. Some also cited onerous narcotics laws and fear of theft in high-crime neighborhoods. "I know some pharmacies who are very anxious about armed robberies and will have signs saying that they don't carry narcotics," one pharmacist said. If demand is truly lower, no one knows why. Minorities are no less likely than whites to suffer from illnesses that cause great pain. Blacks, in fact, have higher cancer rates than whites. Some pharmacists suggested that demand was lower in poor neighborhoods because they had higher proportions of uninsured people who could not afford to fill prescriptions. But doctors who reviewed the survey said racial bias might be at work because the results fit into a wider pattern of inequality in health care, revealed by recent studies showing that blacks are less likely than whites to be referred for kidney transplants or surgery for early-stage cancer. "This study comes on the heels of many other studies that have documented a disparity in treatment in which racial and ethnic factors seem to be the predominant factor," said Dr. Richard Payne, chief of the pain and palliative care service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. "And that's quite disturbing." In addition, doctors are less likely to prescribe painkillers for blacks and Hispanics with broken bones or postoperative pain, perhaps because of the false perception that they are more likely to be addicts or less likely to need treatment for pain. DENISE GRADY - --- MAP posted-by: Greg