From the Journals

Black Americans’ high gout rate stems from social causes


 

FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN

More patient education and rheumatology referrals needed

An impediment to providing that education to patients with gout is unconscious bias on the part of the primary care provider, Dr. Wells said.

“It is about what your perspectives are and what you bring to the table,” he explained. “If you saw [a patient] who looked like someone in your family, that person will be treated differently [than someone who does not look like a family member]. That is where the whole concept [of unconscious bias] comes in.”

Dr. Alvin Wells, director of the Department of Rheumatology at Advocate Aurora Medical Group, Franklin, Wisconsin

Dr. Alvin Wells

Primary care providers need to adopt a holistic approach to gout management that involves counseling about good nutrition, smoking cessation, regular exercise, and limiting alcohol consumption, in addition to medication adherence. Primary care providers may have a bias in treating their Black patients, failing to devote sufficient time and attention to assist them in getting their disease under control, he said.

“Gout should be just like any other chronic disease,” Dr. Wells said. “You need to have a target in mind, and you and your patient need to work together to get to that target. When [patients] end up in rheumatology offices, it is almost too late. I think the take-home message here is that in 2022 ... for any patient who has gout, that patient probably needs to be seen by a rheumatologist because, indeed, with aggressive therapy, preventive therapy, [and] education, and if they are on the right medications, they won’t end up with these crippling joints that we see all the time.”

Dr. McCormick and Dr. Wells disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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