Disparities in disaster healthcare: A review of past disasters.

Angela Pettit Cornelius, Douglas Mark Char, Constance Doyle, Samantha Noll, Vivian Reyes, Jennie Wang, Sharon E Mace
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Objective: To review the literature on the effects seen after disaster on those with poor social determinants of health (SDOH) and individual social needs.

Design: The Disaster Preparedness and Response Committee of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) formed a work group to study healthcare disparities seen in disaster. This group was composed of six physicians on the committee, all of whom have extensive background in disaster medicine and the chair of the committee. A systematic literature review regarding past disasters and all the healthcare disparities seen was undertaken with the goal of organizing this information in one broad concise document looking at multiple disasters over history. The group reviewed multiple documents regarding SDOH and individual social needs for a complete understanding of these factors. Then, a topic list of healthcare disparities resulting from these factors was composed. This list was then filled out with subtopics falling under the header topics. Each member of the workgroup took one of these topics of healthcare disparity seen in disasters and completed a literature search. The databases reviewed include PubMed Central, Google Scholar, and Medline. The terms queried were disaster, healthcare disparities, disaster healthcare disparities, healthcare disparities associated with disasters, SDOH and disaster, special populations and disaster effects, and vulnerable populations and disaster effects. Each author chose articles they felt were most representative and demonstrative of the healthcare disparities seen in past disasters. These social determinant factors and individual social needs were then cross referenced in relation to past disasters for both their causes and the effect they had on various populations after disaster. This was presented to the ACEP board as a committee report.

Results: All the SDOH and individual social needs showed significant negative effects for the populations when combined with a disaster event. These SDOH cut across age, race, and gender affecting a wide swath of people. Previous disaster planning either did not plan or under planned for these marginalized populations during disaster events.

Conclusions: Disparities in healthcare are a pervasive problem that effects many different groups. Disasters magnify and more fully expose these healthcare disparities. We have explored the healthcare disparities with past disasters. These disparities, although common, can be mitigated. The recognition of these poor determinants of health can lead to better and more comprehensive disaster planning for future disasters. Subsequent research is needed to explore these healthcare disparities exacerbated by disasters and to find methods for their mitigation.

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灾害医疗保健的差异:对过去灾害的回顾。
目的:回顾灾后对健康社会决定因素(SDOH)和个体社会需求不良者的影响。设计:美国急诊医师学会(ACEP)的灾难准备和响应委员会成立了一个工作组,研究灾害中医疗保健的差异。该小组由委员会的六名医生组成,他们都有广泛的灾难医学背景和委员会主席。对过去的灾害和所见的所有医疗保健差异进行了系统的文献综述,目的是将这些信息组织在一个广泛而简洁的文件中,研究历史上的多次灾害。该小组审查了有关SDOH和个人社会需求的多个文件,以全面了解这些因素。然后,由这些因素导致的医疗保健差异的主题列表组成。然后在标题主题下填充此列表中的子主题。工作组的每个成员都选择了灾难中医疗保健差异的一个主题,并完成了文献检索。审查的数据库包括PubMed Central、Google Scholar和Medline。查询的术语是灾害、医疗保健差异、灾害医疗保健差异、与灾害相关的医疗保健差异、SDOH和灾害、特殊人群和灾害影响、弱势人群和灾害影响。每位作者都选择了他们认为最具代表性和最能说明过去灾难中医疗保健差距的文章。然后将这些社会决定因素和个人社会需求与过去的灾害相互参照,以了解其原因及其对灾后不同人群的影响。这是作为委员会报告提交给ACEP董事会的。结果:所有个体社会需求与灾害事件相结合时,对人群均有显著的负向影响。这些SDOH跨越了年龄、种族和性别,影响了广泛的人群。以往的灾害规划要么没有规划,要么规划不足。结论:医疗保健方面的差异是一个普遍存在的问题,影响着许多不同的群体。灾害放大并更充分地暴露了这些医疗保健差距。我们探讨了过去灾难中医疗保健的差异。这些差异虽然普遍,但可以减轻。认识到这些不良的健康决定因素,可以为今后的灾害制定更好和更全面的灾害规划。需要进行后续研究,以探索这些因灾害而加剧的保健差异,并找到缓解这些差异的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American journal of disaster medicine
American journal of disaster medicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: With the publication of the American Journal of Disaster Medicine, for the first time, comes real guidance in this new medical specialty from the country"s foremost experts in areas most physicians and medical professionals have never seen…a deadly cocktail of catastrophic events like blast wounds and post explosion injuries, biological weapons contamination and mass physical and psychological trauma that comes in the wake of natural disasters and disease outbreak. The journal has one goal: to provide physicians and medical professionals the essential informational tools they need as they seek to combine emergency medical and trauma skills with crisis management and new forms of triage.
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