Study reveals racial bias in pain recognition among minority children
A study by the University of Delaware reveals racial bias affects recognition of pain in children, with black boys needing to show greater pain expressions than white boys. This bias leads to inadequate pain treatment for minority children across various healthcare settings.
How does this story land?
Summary by OZbrief Editorial · The Guardian Australia · Source
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 02 Jul 2026, 16:00 UTC · Updated 02 Jul 2026, 17:00 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: The Guardian Australia. Editorial policy · Corrections
Trending
- 2026 Midwinter Ball: Political statements make an entrance
- Hugh Jackman enters prenup negotiations with Sutton Foster amid engagement rumors
- ‘Witch-hunt’ in Niger as military regime rounds up LGBTQ+ population
- Aussie musicians vow to make voices heard in AI copyright war
- Iason Gabriel champions ethics in AI as Google DeepMind's first philosopher
- Aftershock frays nerves as many Venezuelans left to fend for themselves



