Racial and Disaggregated Ethnic Disparities of Blood Pressure Control in Community Health Centers.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
David Boston, Jun Hwang, Jennifer A Lucas, Miguel Marino, Zoe Larson, Evelyn Sun, Sophia Giebultowicz, Ana R Quiñones, Danielle M Crookes, Carlos J Rodriguez, John Heintzman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Hypertension is the most prevalent reversible risk for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Blood pressure (BP) control is poor nationally and varies by race/ethnicity, and there is minimal understanding of the impact of country of origin.

Objective: To examine racial/ethnic disparities in BP control among high-risk patients and among Latino patients disaggregated by country of origin.

Design, patients, main measures: Using electronic health record data from 1604 community-based clinics and employing logistic regression adjusted for patient-level covariates, control of final recorded BP (< 130/80) was assessed by race, ethnicity, language preference, and country of origin in 298,860 adult patients with at least one high-risk condition (diabetes, heart, vascular, chronic kidney disease) from 2012 to 2020. Data analysis was conducted from June 2023 to March 2024.

Key results: 40.5% of all patients had a final BP reading of < 130/80 (controlled BP). Compared with non-Latino White, non-Latino Black patients showed the lowest odds of BP control (0.69 [95% CI 0.68-0.71]) and Latino patients the highest (OR 1.19, 95% CI 1.17-1.22), with Spanish-preferring and foreign-born subgroups driving that advantage. Foreign-born Latino patients showed the highest odds of BP control compared with non-Latino White patients (OR 1.42 [95% CI 1.37-1.48]), ranging widely by country of origin.

Conclusions: Race/ethnic disparities in BP control are evident in a multistate network of community-based health centers with significant variability by country of origin among Latino patients. Findings have vast implications for informing equitable clinical and public health strategies to treat patients with demonstrated difficulty achieving and maintaining BP control.

社区卫生中心血压控制的种族及族群差异。
背景:高血压是心血管疾病发病率和死亡率最普遍的可逆危险因素。血压(BP)控制在全国范围内很差,并且因种族/民族而异,并且对原籍国的影响知之甚少。目的:研究按原籍国分类的高危患者和拉美裔患者在血压控制方面的种族差异。设计,患者,主要措施:使用来自1604个社区诊所的电子健康记录数据,并采用调整患者水平共变量的逻辑回归,控制最终记录的血压(关键结果:40.5%的患者有最终血压读数)结论:在多州社区卫生中心网络中,血压控制的种族/民族差异很明显,拉丁裔患者的原籍国差异显著。研究结果对告知公平的临床和公共卫生策略来治疗表现出难以实现和维持血压控制的患者具有广泛的意义。
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
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Journal of General Internal Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
749
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of General Internal Medicine is the official journal of the Society of General Internal Medicine. It promotes improved patient care, research, and education in primary care, general internal medicine, and hospital medicine. Its articles focus on topics such as clinical medicine, epidemiology, prevention, health care delivery, curriculum development, and numerous other non-traditional themes, in addition to classic clinical research on problems in internal medicine.
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