Patient-Reported Social Risk Factor Screening Among Rheumatology Outpatients.

IF 2.8 Q2 RHEUMATOLOGY
Alissa Chandler, Mohammed Hamid, Ziqiao Jiao, Kelsey Hulcher, Isha Sharma, Patrice Odom, Andrew Robinson, Sara Kellahan, Maura Kepper, Colleen Dostal, Senada Fenelon, Seth Eisen, Daphne Lew, Alfred H J Kim
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Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to pilot test a patient-reported social risk factor (SRF) screening tool among rheumatology outpatients and to examine the distribution of SRFs in this population.

Methods: A SRF screening tool was completed electronically by patients. Patients were screened for four core SRF domains (financial strain, housing instability, food insecurity, and transportation needs) and four supplemental SRF domains (physical inactivity, social isolation, stress, and depression). Data from the electronic health record were extracted for patients with at least one domain screened who were seen by participating rheumatology providers between January 1 and October 31, 2023. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regressions were used to examine trends and associations of SRFs in this population.

Results: The sample included 483 patients, and 84% of patients screened positive for at least one SRF. Physical inactivity (73%, 311 of 429) and social isolation (58%, 212 of 367) were the most common SRFs. Prevalence of core SRF domains was 35% for financial strain (145 of 412), 22% for housing instability (82 of 370), 23% for food insecurity (96 of 420), and 11% for transportation needs (48 of 427). Sociodemographic groups with higher prevalence of SRFs included patients reporting Medicaid insurance, younger age, Black race, or unmarried status. Multivariate analyses showed that Medicaid insurance increased odds of reporting SRFs in all core domains.

Conclusion: Our SRF screening identified a high burden of SRFs among rheumatology outpatients, giving a new level of detail into patients' barriers and possible needs. Future work will uncover associations between SRFs and clinical outcomes and evaluate the impact of interventions to address SRFs.

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风湿病门诊患者报告的社会风险因素筛查。
目的:本研究的目的是在风湿病门诊患者中试点测试患者报告的社会风险因素(SRF)筛查工具,并检查SRF在该人群中的分布。方法:患者通过电子方式完成SRF筛查工具。筛选患者的四个核心SRF域(经济紧张、住房不稳定、食品不安全和交通需求)和四个补充SRF域(缺乏身体活动、社会隔离、压力和抑郁)。从电子健康记录中提取的数据来自2023年1月1日至10月31日期间参与风湿病学提供者看到的至少有一个筛选域的患者。使用描述性统计和多变量逻辑回归来检查该人群中srf的趋势和关联。结果:样本包括483例患者,84%的患者筛查出至少一种SRF阳性。缺乏身体活动(73%,429人中311人)和社会孤立(58%,367人中212人)是最常见的srf。核心SRF领域的流行率为:财政紧张占35%(412人中有145人),住房不稳定占22%(370人中有82人),粮食不安全占23%(420人中有96人),交通需求占11%(427人中有48人)。srf患病率较高的社会人口统计学群体包括有医疗补助保险、年龄较小、黑人或未婚的患者。多变量分析表明,医疗补助保险增加了所有核心领域报告srf的几率。结论:我们的SRF筛查确定了风湿病门诊患者SRF的高负担,为患者的障碍和可能的需求提供了新的详细信息。未来的工作将揭示SRFs与临床结果之间的联系,并评估干预措施对SRFs的影响。
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
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
10 weeks
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