Is Limited English Proficiency Associated With Differences in Care Processes and Treatment Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Orthopaedic Surgery? A Systematic Review

Rodnell Busigo Torres, Avanish Yendluri, BZ Stern, Rami Rajjoub, Mateo Restrepo Mejia, Gloria Willson, Darwin D. Chen, C. Moucha, Brett L. Hayden, J. Poeran
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Currently, there are mixed findings of the associations between limited English proficiency and care processes and outcomes, warranting a cross-study synthesis to identify patterns of associations.\n \n \n \n In this systematic review, we asked: Is limited English proficiency associated with (1) differences in clinical care processes, (2) differences in care processes related to patient engagement, and (3) poorer treatment outcomes in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery in English-speaking countries?\n \n \n \n On June 9, 2023, a systematic search of four databases from inception through the search date (PubMed, Ovid Embase, Web of Science, and Scopus) was performed by a medical librarian. Potentially eligible articles were observational studies that examined the association between limited English proficiency and the prespecified categories of outcomes among pediatric and adult patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery or receiving care in an orthopaedic surgery setting. We identified 10,563 records, of which we screened 6966 titles and abstracts after removing duplicates. We reviewed 56 full-text articles and included 29 peer-reviewed studies (outcome categories: eight for clinical care processes, 10 for care processes related to patient engagement, and 15 for treatment outcomes), with a total of 362,746 patients or encounters. We extracted data elements including study characteristics, definition of language exposure, specific outcomes, and study results. The quality of each study was evaluated using adapted Newcastle-Ottawa scales for cohort or cross-sectional studies. Most studies had a low (48%) or moderate (45%) risk of bias, but two cross-sectional studies had a high risk of bias. To answer our questions, we synthesized associations and no-difference findings, further stratified by adjusted versus unadjusted estimates, for each category of outcomes. No meta-analysis was performed.\n \n \n \n There were mixed findings regarding whether limited English proficiency is associated with differences in clinical care processes, with the strongest adjusted associations between non-English versus English as the preferred language and delayed ACL reconstruction surgery and receipt of neuraxial versus general anesthesia for other non-Spanish versus English primary language in patients undergoing THA or TKA. Limited English proficiency was also associated with increased hospitalization costs for THA or TKA but not opioid prescribing in pediatric patients undergoing surgery for fractures. For care processes related to patient engagement, limited English proficiency was consistently associated with decreased patient portal use and decreased completion of patient-reported outcome measures per adjusted estimates. The exposure was also associated with decreased virtual visit completion for other non-Spanish versus English language and decreased postoperative opioid refill requests after TKA but not differences in attendance-related outcomes. For treatment outcomes, limited English proficiency was consistently associated with increased hospital length of stay and nonhome discharge per adjusted estimates, but not hospital returns. There were mixed findings regarding associations with increased complications and worse postoperative patient-reported outcome measure scores.\n \n \n \n Findings specifically suggest the need to remove language-based barriers for patients to engage in care, including for patient portal use and patient-reported outcome measure completion, and to identify mechanisms and solutions for increased postoperative healthcare use. However, interpretations are limited by the heterogeneity of study parameters, including the language exposure. Future research should include more-precise and transparent definitions of limited English proficiency and contextual details on available language-based resources to support quantitative syntheses.\n \n \n \n Level III, therapeutic study\n","PeriodicalId":115399,"journal":{"name":"Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research","volume":"113 15","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1097/corr.0000000000003034","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Approximately 25 million people in the United States have limited English proficiency. Current developments in orthopaedic surgery, such as the expansion of preoperative education classes or patient-reported outcome collection in response to bundled payment models, may exacerbate language-related barriers. Currently, there are mixed findings of the associations between limited English proficiency and care processes and outcomes, warranting a cross-study synthesis to identify patterns of associations. In this systematic review, we asked: Is limited English proficiency associated with (1) differences in clinical care processes, (2) differences in care processes related to patient engagement, and (3) poorer treatment outcomes in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery in English-speaking countries? On June 9, 2023, a systematic search of four databases from inception through the search date (PubMed, Ovid Embase, Web of Science, and Scopus) was performed by a medical librarian. Potentially eligible articles were observational studies that examined the association between limited English proficiency and the prespecified categories of outcomes among pediatric and adult patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery or receiving care in an orthopaedic surgery setting. We identified 10,563 records, of which we screened 6966 titles and abstracts after removing duplicates. We reviewed 56 full-text articles and included 29 peer-reviewed studies (outcome categories: eight for clinical care processes, 10 for care processes related to patient engagement, and 15 for treatment outcomes), with a total of 362,746 patients or encounters. We extracted data elements including study characteristics, definition of language exposure, specific outcomes, and study results. The quality of each study was evaluated using adapted Newcastle-Ottawa scales for cohort or cross-sectional studies. Most studies had a low (48%) or moderate (45%) risk of bias, but two cross-sectional studies had a high risk of bias. To answer our questions, we synthesized associations and no-difference findings, further stratified by adjusted versus unadjusted estimates, for each category of outcomes. No meta-analysis was performed. There were mixed findings regarding whether limited English proficiency is associated with differences in clinical care processes, with the strongest adjusted associations between non-English versus English as the preferred language and delayed ACL reconstruction surgery and receipt of neuraxial versus general anesthesia for other non-Spanish versus English primary language in patients undergoing THA or TKA. Limited English proficiency was also associated with increased hospitalization costs for THA or TKA but not opioid prescribing in pediatric patients undergoing surgery for fractures. For care processes related to patient engagement, limited English proficiency was consistently associated with decreased patient portal use and decreased completion of patient-reported outcome measures per adjusted estimates. The exposure was also associated with decreased virtual visit completion for other non-Spanish versus English language and decreased postoperative opioid refill requests after TKA but not differences in attendance-related outcomes. For treatment outcomes, limited English proficiency was consistently associated with increased hospital length of stay and nonhome discharge per adjusted estimates, but not hospital returns. There were mixed findings regarding associations with increased complications and worse postoperative patient-reported outcome measure scores. Findings specifically suggest the need to remove language-based barriers for patients to engage in care, including for patient portal use and patient-reported outcome measure completion, and to identify mechanisms and solutions for increased postoperative healthcare use. However, interpretations are limited by the heterogeneity of study parameters, including the language exposure. Future research should include more-precise and transparent definitions of limited English proficiency and contextual details on available language-based resources to support quantitative syntheses. Level III, therapeutic study
英语水平有限是否与骨科手术患者的护理流程和治疗结果差异有关?系统回顾
美国约有 2500 万人英语水平有限。骨科手术目前的发展,如扩大术前教育课程或根据捆绑支付模式收集患者报告结果,可能会加剧与语言有关的障碍。目前,关于英语水平有限与护理过程和结果之间的关系的研究结果不一,因此有必要进行交叉研究综述,以确定两者之间的关系模式。 在本系统综述中,我们提出了以下问题在英语国家接受骨科手术的患者中,英语水平有限是否与(1)临床护理流程的差异、(2)与患者参与相关的护理流程的差异以及(3)较差的治疗效果有关? 2023 年 6 月 9 日,医学图书管理员对四个数据库(PubMed、Ovid Embase、Web of Science 和 Scopus)进行了系统检索,检索时间从开始到检索日。符合条件的文章均为观察性研究,研究对象为接受骨科手术或在骨科手术环境中接受治疗的儿童和成人患者,这些研究探讨了英语能力有限与预设结果类别之间的关系。我们找到了 10563 条记录,在去除重复内容后,我们筛选了其中的 6966 篇标题和摘要。我们审查了 56 篇全文文章,并纳入了 29 项同行评审研究(结果类别:8 项为临床护理流程,10 项为与患者参与相关的护理流程,15 项为治疗结果),共涉及 362,746 名患者或次。我们提取的数据元素包括研究特征、语言接触的定义、特定结果和研究结果。我们使用改编的纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表对每项研究的质量进行了评估,该量表适用于队列研究或横断面研究。大多数研究的偏倚风险较低(48%)或中等(45%),但有两项横断面研究的偏倚风险较高。为了回答我们的问题,我们对每类结果的相关性和无差异结果进行了综合分析,并根据调整估计值和未调整估计值进行了进一步分层。没有进行荟萃分析。 关于英语水平有限是否与临床护理流程的差异有关,研究结果不一,其中调整后的关联性最强的是接受THA或TKA手术的患者中,非英语与英语作为首选语言与前交叉韧带重建手术延迟之间的关联,以及接受神经麻醉与接受全身麻醉之间的关联。英语水平有限也与接受 THA 或 TKA 手术的儿科骨折患者住院费用增加有关,但与阿片类药物处方无关。在与患者参与相关的护理流程中,英语水平有限一直与患者门户网站使用率降低和患者报告的结果测量完成率降低相关(按调整后的估计值计算)。此外,英语水平有限还与其他非西班牙语与英语的虚拟就诊完成率下降以及TKA术后阿片类药物续药申请减少有关,但在就诊相关结果方面并无差异。在治疗结果方面,根据调整后的估计,英语水平有限与住院时间延长和非家庭出院有关,但与退院无关。关于并发症增加和术后患者报告结果评分恶化的相关性,研究结果不一。 研究结果特别表明,有必要消除患者参与护理过程中的语言障碍,包括患者门户网站的使用和患者报告结果测量的完成,并确定增加术后医疗保健使用的机制和解决方案。然而,由于研究参数(包括语言接触)的异质性,解释受到了限制。未来的研究应包括更精确、更透明的英语水平有限定义,以及可用语言资源的背景细节,以支持定量综合研究。 三级,治疗性研究
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