Socioeconomic and Clinical Demography of Dental Missed Care Opportunities.

IF 2.2 Q2 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
JDR Clinical & Translational Research Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2022-06-19 DOI:10.1177/23800844221104790
K Discepolo, P Melvin, M Ghazarians, N Tennermann, V L Ward
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Introduction: Missed care opportunities (MCOs) contribute to poor health outcomes, and pediatric dental patients are particularly vulnerable; identifying associated patient characteristics will help inform development of targeted interventional programs.

Objective: To assess socioeconomic and demographic disparities associated with MCOs among children in an urban pediatric hospital's dental clinic. MCOs lead to a lack of continuous care and increased emergent needs, so understanding MCOs is required to achieve equitable pediatric dental health.

Methods: A retrospective 2-y (2019-2020) cohort of MCOs in children 1 to 17 y old, with scheduled dental visits. MCOs were defined as appointments not attended or canceled and not rescheduled prior to initial scheduled visit. Multivariable mixed-effects logistic regression models with patient-level clustering assessed the associations of demographics, neighborhood-level socioeconomic factors (using social vulnerability index [SVI]), and clinic characteristics with MCOs.

Results: Of 30,095 visits, 30.9% were MCOs. Multivariable logistic regression estimated increased likelihood of MCOs in Black/non-Hispanic (odds ratio [OR], 1.20; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.09-1.32) and Hispanic (OR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.06-1.31) patients, patients with public insurance (OR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.15-1.36) or no insurance (OR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.15-1.85), patients with complex chronic conditions (OR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.03-1.19), visits scheduled during the COVID-19 pandemic (OR, 9.48; 95% CI, 8.89-10.11), appointments with wait days over 21 d (OR, 4.07; 95% CI, 3.49-4.74), and children from neighborhoods of high social vulnerability (75th percentile SVI) (OR, 1.08; 95% CI, 1.01-1.16).

Conclusions: Children with highest dental MCOs were from neighborhoods with high SVI, had public insurance, and were from marginalized populations. MCOs contribute to inequities in overall health; hence, interventions that address barriers related to characteristics associated with pediatric dental MCOs are needed.

Knowledge transfer statement: Missed care opportunities contribute to poor health outcomes; identifying associated patient characteristics will help inform development of targeted interventional programs. Providing these findings to stakeholders will better impart understanding access barriers and drive research and program development. Dissemination of this information in the form of altering appointment practices will better accommodate specific patient population needs.

牙科错失护理机会的社会经济和临床人口学。
引言:错过护理机会(MCO)导致健康状况不佳,儿童牙科患者尤其容易受到伤害;识别相关的患者特征将有助于制定有针对性的介入方案。目的:评估城市儿科医院牙科诊所儿童MCO的社会经济和人口统计学差异。MCO导致缺乏持续护理和增加紧急需求,因此需要了解MCO才能实现公平的儿科牙科健康。方法:对1至17岁儿童的MCO进行2年(2019-2020)的回顾性队列研究,并安排牙科就诊。MCO被定义为在首次预定就诊之前未参加或取消且未重新安排的预约。采用患者水平聚类的多变量混合效应logistic回归模型评估了人口统计学、社区水平社会经济因素(使用社会脆弱性指数[SVI])和临床特征与MCO的关系。结果:在30095次就诊中,30.9%为MCO。多变量逻辑回归估计了黑人/非西班牙裔(比值比[OR],1.20;95%置信区间[CI],1.09-1.32)和西班牙牙裔(OR,1.18;95%可信区间,1.06-1.31)患者、有公共保险(OR,1.25;95%CI,1.15-1.36)或没有保险(OR:1.46;95%CI:1.15-1.85)患者、患有复杂慢性病的患者(OR,1.11;95%CI;1.03-1.19)发生MCO的可能性增加,新冠肺炎大流行期间安排的就诊(OR,9.48;95%CI,8.89-10.11),等待天数超过21天的预约(OR,4.07;95%CI(3.49-4.74)),以及来自高社会脆弱性社区的儿童(第75百分位SVI)(OR,1.08;95%CI1.01-1.16),来自边缘化人群。MCO助长了整体健康方面的不平等;因此,需要解决与儿科牙科MCO相关特征相关的障碍的干预措施。知识转移声明:错过护理机会导致健康状况不佳;识别相关的患者特征将有助于制定有针对性的介入方案。将这些发现提供给利益相关者将更好地了解获取障碍,并推动研究和项目开发。以改变预约方式传播这些信息将更好地满足特定患者群体的需求。
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
JDR Clinical & Translational Research
JDR Clinical & Translational Research DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE-
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: JDR Clinical & Translational Research seeks to publish the highest quality research articles on clinical and translational research including all of the dental specialties and implantology. Examples include behavioral sciences, cariology, oral & pharyngeal cancer, disease diagnostics, evidence based health care delivery, human genetics, health services research, periodontal diseases, oral medicine, radiology, and pathology. The JDR Clinical & Translational Research expands on its research content by including high-impact health care and global oral health policy statements and systematic reviews of clinical concepts affecting clinical practice. Unique to the JDR Clinical & Translational Research are advances in clinical and translational medicine articles created to focus on research with an immediate potential to affect clinical therapy outcomes.
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