综合行为健康实施与慢性病管理不平等:对全州数据的探索性研究。

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Gretchen J R Buchanan, Jerica M Berge, Timothy F Piehler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:糖尿病、血管疾病和哮喘患者通常都在努力维持其慢性健康状况的稳定,尤其是那些居住在农村地区、生活贫困或种族或民族上属于少数群体的人。这些群体在医疗保健方面可能会遇到不公平的情况,即一个群体比其他群体拥有更少或更低质量的资源。将行为医疗保健服务纳入初级保健有望帮助初级保健团队更好地管理患者的病情,但这涉及到以多种方式改变诊所提供医疗服务的方式。一些诊所在全面整合行为医疗模式方面比其他诊所更成功,这一点从我们团队之前开展的研究中可以看出,我们确定了四种实施模式:低度实施、结构性实施、部分实施和强力实施。对于这种整合差异与慢性病管理的关系,以及 IBH 能否成为减少医疗保健不平等的策略,我们知之甚少。本研究探讨了在医疗保健不平等的背景下,IBH 实施差异与慢性病管理之间的潜在关系:在之前发表的对明尼苏达州 102 家初级保健诊所进行的潜类分析的基础上,我们使用多元回归建立了 IBH 潜类与慢性病管理中的医疗不平等之间的关系,然后使用结构方程模型研究了 IBH 潜类如何缓和这些医疗不平等:结果:与我们的假设相反,同时也说明了研究问题的复杂性,慢性病管理较好的诊所更有可能是低 IBH 诊所,而不是任何其他整合水平的诊所。随着诊所所在地的白种人越来越多,强IBH诊所和结构性IBH诊所的慢性病管理效果也越来越好:IBH可能会改善医疗服务,但可能不足以解决医疗服务不公平的问题;当健康的社会决定因素较少时,IBH似乎更有效。IBH较低的诊所可能没有动力为慢性病管理进行这种实践变革,可能需要为其提供其他理由。可能需要进行更大规模的系统和政策变革,专门针对医疗保健不公平的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integrated behavioral health implementation and chronic disease management inequities: an exploratory study of statewide data.

Background: People with diabetes, vascular disease, and asthma often struggle to maintain stability in their chronic health conditions, particularly those in rural areas, living in poverty, or racially or ethnically minoritized populations. These groups can experience inequities in healthcare, where one group of people has fewer or lower-quality resources than others. Integrating behavioral healthcare services into primary care holds promise in helping the primary care team better manage patients' conditions, but it involves changing the way care is delivered in a clinic in multiple ways. Some clinics are more successful than others in fully integrating behavioral health models as shown by previous research conducted by our team identifying four patterns of implementation: Low, Structural, Partial, and Strong. Little is known about how this variation in integration may be related to chronic disease management and if IBH could be a strategy to reduce healthcare inequities. This study explores potential relationships between IBH implementation variation and chronic disease management in the context of healthcare inequities.

Methods: Building on a previously published latent class analysis of 102 primary care clinics in Minnesota, we used multiple regression to establish relationships between IBH latent class and healthcare inequities in chronic disease management, and then structural equation modeling to examine how IBH latent class may moderate those healthcare inequities.

Results: Contrary to our hypotheses, and demonstrating the complexity of the research question, clinics with better chronic disease management were more likely to be Low IBH rather than any other level of integration. Strong and Structural IBH clinics demonstrated better chronic disease management as race in the clinic's location became more White.

Conclusions: IBH may result in improved care, though it may not be sufficient to resolve healthcare inequities; it appears that IBH may be more effective when fewer social determinants of health are present. Clinics with Low IBH may not be motivated to engage in this practice change for chronic disease management and may need to be provided other reasons to do so. Larger systemic and policy changes are likely required that specifically target the mechanisms of healthcare inequities.

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