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Adventures in Social Justice™: ‘Advil Pain Equity Project’

AP Photo/WHO, Christopher Black, File

Evil white (actually, disproportionately Asian) doctors are not immune to the evils of White Supremacy™. Thank the Good Lord that Pfizer-owned pharmaceutical brand Advil is on the case with its “Advil Pain Equity Project.”

Related'The Good Men Project’ Denounces Whites as Racist for Being Anti-Racist

Via Advil:

The Advil Pain Equity Project is a long-term commitment to champion equitable and accessible pain relief, created by Advil and launched in partnership with Morehouse School of Medicine and BLKHLTH. The Advil Pain Equity Project's first campaign, Believe My Pain, is focused on illuminating the issue of pain inequity in Black communities.

The evidence that Black (which is always capitalized for some obscure Diversity™ and Inclusion™ reason) people’s pain goes ignored by racist doctors is a survey conducted by black college Morehouse School of Medicine — which one might argue, by the way, has an inherent, unavoidable conflict of interest that goes undisclosed and unacknowledged — of 2,000 people, 1,000 of whom identified as Black or African-American, the purpose of which was to:

Explore perceptions of inequities in pain diagnosis and treatment among Black Americans, given the body of research demonstrating that Black communities have historically experienced pain inequity at higher levels during healthcare treatment.

The methodology was as follows:

Edelman Data & Intelligence administered an online survey of American adults about their experiences with pain. A total of 2,000 respondents were surveyed including 1,000 adults roughly representative of the general population of US pain sufferers, and 1,000 who identified as Black or African American. The sample was constructed to ensure a large subsample of Black respondents to identify statistically significant differences between the two groups. Edelman utilized opt-in panels to recruit and provide incentives to all respondents, and the survey was conducted in Spring 2023.

Bear in mind that there was no objective measurement of Black people’s alleged “pain inequity.” Rather, it was all based on self-perception of how they were treated by doctors — reported via online survey, no less. Very rigorous analysis.

And we all know that racial minorities are not well-trained in modern Western society to perceive literally every social interaction with a white person through the lens of systemic racism or whatever, so we can be sure these self-reported experiences of “pain inequity” are well-founded in reality.

To promote its work, Advil’s “Believe My Pain” project created this heart-wrenching propaganda work complete with sad piano music overlaid over aggrieved minorities discussing how they were hate-crimed by the medical system.

Imagine being a doctor treating one of these people in the direct aftermath of undergoing this race-hate training, ready and eager to notice, experience, and seek reparations for self-perceived discrimination at the hands of White Supremacist™ (again, disproportionately Asian, actually) doctors.

The panel features a diverse doctor named — and you can’t make this up — Dr. Uché Blackstock, brought on to declare as a matter of fact that “I think, like, the main thing is that health professionals think that black people are biologically different than other people, that our skin is thicker, that we have less sensitive skin and higher pain tolerance, and that is all absolutely false.”

Maybe a doctor can chime in here in the comments section and explain what course in medical school these evil White Supremacy™ notions are taught.

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