Through An Equity Lens: Illuminating The Relationships Among Social Inequities, Stigma And Discrimination, And Patient Experiences of Emergency Health Care.

IF 3.4 4区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
International Journal of Health Services Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Epub Date: 2022-01-31 DOI:10.1177/00207314221075515
Colleen Varcoe, Annette J Browne, Vicky Bungay, Nancy Perrin, Erin Wilson, C Nadine Wathen, David Byres, Elder Roberta Price
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

People who experience the greatest social inequities often have poor experiences in emergency departments (EDs) so that they are deterred from seeking care, leave without care complete, receive inadequate care, and/or return repeatedly for unresolved problems. However, efforts to measure and monitor experiences of care rarely capture the experiences of people facing the greatest inequities, experiences of discrimination, or relationships among these variables. This analysis examined how patients' experiences, including self-reported ratings of care, experiences of discrimination, and repeat visits vary with social and economic circumstances. Every consecutive person presenting to three diverse EDs was invited if/when they were able to consent; 2424 provided demographic and contact information; and 1692 (70%) completed the survey. Latent class analysis (LCA) using sociodemographic variables: age, gender, financial strain, employment, housing stability, English as first language, born in Canada, and Indigenous identity, indicated a six-class solution. Classes differed significantly on having regular access to primary care, reasons for the visit, and acuity. Classes also differed on self-reported discrimination every day and during their ED visit, ratings of ED care, and number of ED visits within the past six months. ED care can be improved through attention to how intersecting forms of structural disadvantage and inequities affect patient experiences.

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透过公平的镜头:阐明社会不平等,污名和歧视之间的关系,以及紧急医疗保健的病人经验。
经历过最严重的社会不平等的人往往在急诊科(ed)有糟糕的经历,因此他们不敢寻求治疗,完全没有治疗就离开了,得到的治疗不充分,和/或因为未解决的问题反复回来。然而,衡量和监测护理经历的努力很少能捕捉到面临最大不平等的人的经历、歧视经历或这些变量之间的关系。该分析考察了患者的经历,包括自我报告的护理评分、歧视经历和重复就诊如何随着社会和经济环境的变化而变化。每个连续出现在三个不同急诊室的人都被邀请,如果/当他们能够同意;2424人提供了人口统计和联系信息;1692人(70%)完成调查。潜在阶级分析(LCA)使用社会人口学变量:年龄、性别、财务压力、就业、住房稳定性、英语为第一语言、出生在加拿大和土著身份,表明了一个六阶级的解决方案。各班级在是否定期接受初级保健、就诊原因和视力方面存在显著差异。不同班级的学生在每天和ED访问期间的自我歧视报告、ED护理评分以及过去六个月内ED访问次数方面也存在差异。通过关注结构性劣势和不平等的交叉形式如何影响患者体验,可以改善急诊科护理。
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
4.50
自引率
2.90%
发文量
41
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Health Services is a peer-reviewed journal that contains articles on health and social policy, political economy and sociology, history and philosophy, ethics and law in the areas of health and well-being. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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