Shamita Shah, Alicia C Shillington, Edmond Kato Kabagambe, Kathleen L Deering, Sheena Babin, Joseph Capelouto, Cedric Pulliam, Aarti Patel, Brandon LaChappelle, Julia Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Data regarding care access and outcomes in Black/Indigenous/People of Color/Hispanic (BIPOC/H) individuals is limited. This study evaluated care barriers, disease status, and outcomes among a diverse population of White/non-Hispanic (W/NH) and BIPOC/H inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients at a large U.S. health system.
Methods: An anonymous online survey was administered to adult IBD patients at Ochsner Health treated between Aug 2019 and Dec 2021. Collected data included symptoms, the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems and Barriers to Care surveys, health-related quality of life (HRQOL) via the Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire, the Medication Adherence Rating Scale-4, and the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire. Medical record data examined healthcare resource utilization. Analyses compared W/NH and BIPOC/H via chi-square and t tests.
Results: Compared with their W/NH counterparts, BIPOC/H patients reported more difficulties accessing IBD specialists (26% vs 11%; P = .03), poor symptom control (35% vs 18%; P = .02), lower mean HRQOL (41 ± 14 vs 49 ± 13; P < .001), more negative impact on employment (50% vs 33%; P = .029), worse financial stability (53% vs 32%; P = .006), and more problems finding social/emotional support for IBD (64% vs 37%; P < .001). BIPOC/H patients utilized emergency department services more often (42% vs 22%; P = .004), reported higher concern scores related to IBD medication (17.1 vs 14.9; P = .001), and worried more about medication harm (19.5% vs 17.7%; P = .002). The survey response rate was 14%.
Conclusions: BIPOC/H patients with IBD had worse clinical disease, lower HRQOL scores, had more medication concerns, had less access to specialists, had less social and emotional support, and used emergency department services more often than W/NH patients.
背景:有关黑人/原住民/有色人种/西班牙裔(BIPOC/H)获得医疗服务的机会和结果的数据非常有限。本研究评估了美国一家大型医疗系统中白人/非西班牙裔(W/NH)和有色人种/西班牙裔炎症性肠病(IBD)患者的护理障碍、疾病状况和治疗效果:在 2019 年 8 月至 2021 年 12 月期间,对在 Ochsner Health 接受治疗的成年 IBD 患者进行匿名在线调查。收集的数据包括症状、医疗保健提供者和系统消费者评估及护理障碍调查、通过炎症性肠病简短问卷调查的健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)、用药依从性评分量表-4和药物信念问卷。医疗记录数据检查了医疗资源利用情况。通过卡方检验和 t 检验对 W/NH 和 BIPOC/H 进行了分析比较:结果:与W/NH患者相比,BIPOC/H患者更难找到IBD专科医生(26% vs 11%; P = .03),症状控制不佳(35% vs 18%; P = .02),平均HRQOL较低(41 ± 14 vs 49 ± 13; P 结论:BIPOC/H患者更难找到IBD专科医生,症状控制不佳(35% vs 18%; P = .02),平均HRQOL较低(41 ± 14 vs 49 ± 13; P = .03):与白种人/黑种人患者相比,白种人/黑种人 IBD 患者的临床病情更严重,HRQOL 评分更低,对药物治疗有更多的顾虑,与专科医生接触的机会更少,获得的社会和情感支持更少,使用急诊科服务的频率更高。
期刊介绍:
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases® supports the mission of the Crohn''s & Colitis Foundation by bringing the most impactful and cutting edge clinical topics and research findings related to inflammatory bowel diseases to clinicians and researchers working in IBD and related fields. The Journal is committed to publishing on innovative topics that influence the future of clinical care, treatment, and research.