确保美国卫生资源与服务管理局资助的卫生中心患者糖尿病管理中的公平护理。

Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.2337/ds22-0016
Nadereh Pourat, Xiao Chen, Connie Lu, Weihao Zhou, Brionna Hair, Joshua Bolton, Alek Sripipatana
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:探讨成人健康中心(HC) 2型糖尿病患者在糖尿病管理和预后方面是否存在种族/民族差异。方法:我们分析了2014年健康中心患者调查的数据,这是一个全国性的HC患者样本。我们检查了糖尿病监测指标(糖化血红蛋白检测、年度足部/眼科医生就诊和胆固醇检查)和护理管理指标(专家转诊、个人治疗计划、电话/预约/家访的接收情况)。我们还检查了糖尿病特异性结局(血糖水平、糖尿病相关急诊科就诊/住院、糖尿病自我管理信心)和一般结局(就诊次数、急诊科就诊次数和住院次数)。我们使用多水平逻辑回归模型通过上述指标来检验种族/民族差异。结果:我们发现在糖化血红蛋白检测、眼科医生就诊和糖尿病特异性结局方面存在种族/民族差异。然而,西班牙裔/拉丁裔(比值比[OR] 0.26)、非西班牙裔非洲裔美国人(比值比[OR] 0.25)和亚洲人(比值比[OR] 0.11)接受胆固醇检查的可能性低于白人。非西班牙裔非裔美国人(OR 0.43)不太可能频繁就医,而西班牙裔/拉丁裔患者(OR 0.45)不太可能接受个人治疗计划。结论:健康中心在很大程度上提供了公平的糖尿病护理,但在某些指标上仍有改进的余地。可能需要针对某些种族/民族群体的量身定制的努力,如具有文化能力的护理和健康教育,以改善糖尿病的管理和结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ensuring Equitable Care in Diabetes Management Among Patients of Health Resources & Services Administration-Funded Health Centers in the United States.

Aim: To explore whether there are racial/ethnic differences in diabetes management and outcomes among adult health center (HC) patients with type 2 diabetes.

Methods: We analyzed data from the 2014 Health Center Patient Survey, a national sample of HC patients. We examined indicators of diabetes monitoring (A1C testing, annual foot/eye doctor visits, and cholesterol checks) and care management (specialist referrals, individual treatment plan, and receipt of calls/appointments/home visits). We also examined diabetes-specific outcomes (blood glucose levels, diabetes-related emergency department [ED] visits/hospitalizations, and diabetes self-management confidence) and general outcomes (number of doctor visits, ED visits, and hospitalizations). We used multilevel logistic regression models to examine racial/ethnic disparities by the above indicators.

Results: We found racial/ethnic parity in A1C testing, eye doctor visits, and diabetes-specific outcomes. However, Hispanics/Latinos (odds ratio [OR] 0.26), non-Hispanic African Americans (OR 0.25), and Asians (OR 0.11) were less likely to receive a cholesterol check than Whites. Non-Hispanic African Americans (OR 0.43) were less likely to have frequent doctor visits, while Hispanic/Latino patients (OR 0.45) were less likely to receive an individual treatment plan.

Conclusion: HCs largely provide equitable diabetes care but have room for improvement in some indicators. Tailored efforts such as culturally competent care and health education for some racial/ethnic groups may be needed to improve diabetes management and outcomes.

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