Ask, Acknowledge, Ascend: Addressing Mistrust as a Strategy to Address Disparities in Orthopaedic Ambulatory Care.

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 NURSING
Orthopaedic Nursing Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-27 DOI:10.1097/NOR.0000000000001107
Susan W Salmond, Nadine Aktan, Shelby Pitts, Christine Repsha, Jeannette Manchester, Karen O'Connell Schill, Virginia Allread
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Advances in minimally invasive surgical techniques, robotics, anesthesia techniques, and recovery protocols have been instrumental in shifting orthopaedic surgical care from the hospital-based operating room to ambulatory surgical centers. Outpatient surgical services are thought to offer a lower-cost model of care, reduced out-of-pocket expenses, more predictable scheduling, faster recovery times, convenience, and lower risk of nosocomial infections. With these known advantages, it is critical to examine whether this safer environment is accessible to all. Racial/ethnic and gender disparities have been well-documented in the inpatient orthopaedic environment and concern has been raised that the shift toward outpatient surgery could widen disparities and access to care. This article describes ongoing disparities in ambulatory orthopaedic surgery for racialized minorities, women, and people with obesity. Having experienced these disparities, many lack trust in health care providers and the health system. Approaches for addressing this mistrust to create meaningful patient-centered care are described.

微创手术技术、机器人技术、麻醉技术和恢复方案的进步有助于将骨科手术护理从医院手术室转移到门诊手术中心。门诊手术服务被认为是一种成本较低的护理模式,可减少自付费用、更可预测的时间安排、更快的恢复时间、便利性和更低的院内感染风险。鉴于这些已知的优势,研究是否所有人都能享受到这种更安全的环境至关重要。住院骨科环境中的种族/民族和性别差异已被充分证明,人们担心向门诊手术的转变可能会扩大差异和医疗服务的可及性。本文描述了在门诊骨科手术中,少数种族、女性和肥胖症患者之间持续存在的差异。在经历了这些差异之后,许多人对医疗服务提供者和医疗系统缺乏信任。文章介绍了解决这种不信任的方法,以创造以患者为中心的有意义的医疗服务。
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来源期刊
Orthopaedic Nursing
Orthopaedic Nursing 医学-护理
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
132
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Orthopaedic Nursing is an international journal providing continuing education for orthopaedic nurses. Focusing on a wide variety of clinical settings - hospital unit, physician"s office, ambulatory care centers, emergency room, operating room, rehabilitation facility, community service programs, the client"s home, and others – Orthopaedic Nursing provides departmental sections on current events, organizational activities, research, product and drug information, and literature findings. Articles reflect a commitment to professional development and the nursing profession as well as clinical, administrative, academic, and research areas of the orthopaedic specialty. Official Journal of the National Association of Orthopaedic Nurses (NAON)
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