评估骨科手术中的医疗公平:对 24,000 多例手术的分析。

IF 2 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS
Zachary R Visco, Ezan Chaudry, John S Hudson, Moe R Lim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:在初级保健和外科领域,人们对健康差异进行了广泛的研究。本研究的目的是通过比较患者人口统计因素与手术等待时间之间的关系,研究大型学术健康中心骨科手术病例的手术机会差异:对一家公立三级医疗一级创伤中心2018年至2022年的24778例骨科手术病例进行了回顾性分析,以评估基于患者特定因素(包括种族、性别、语言和社会经济地位)的手术时间差异:择期手术病例的平均手术等待时间为 28.11 ± 26.34 天。急诊手术病例的平均手术等待时间为(1.23 ± 1.50)天。患者的种族、性别、语言和社会经济地位对紧急手术排期的手术等待时间没有影响。女性患者的择期手术平均等待时间更长,而种族与等待时间的增加关系不大。双因素交互分析显示,患者人口学因素对手术等待时间没有多因素影响。患者的种族和社会经济地位与手术地点距离的增加有关,但距离的增加与手术等待时间的增加无关:结论:在这一患者群中,患者人口学因素与手术时间的关系在临床上并不明显,这与之前的研究表明种族和社会经济地位对医疗结果和就医机会的影响形成了鲜明对比。种族和社会经济地位确实与手术中心距离的增加有关,但与手术地点的距离与手术等待时间无关。这对之前有关医疗保健公平的文献有所帮助,并表明手术等待时间可能不会造成已知的少数群体和边缘化患者的医疗保健不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing Healthcare Equity in Orthopaedic Surgery: An Analysis of Over 24,000 Surgical Cases.

Introduction: Health disparities have been widely studied in the primary care and surgical settings. The purpose of this study was to examine surgical access disparities for orthopaedic surgical cases performed at a large academic health center by comparing the relationship between patient demographic factors and surgical wait time.

Methods: A total of 24,778 orthopaedic surgical cases from 2018 to 2022 at a public, tertiary care, Level I trauma center were retrospectively analyzed to assess for surgical timing disparities based on patient-specific factors, including race, sex, language, and socioeconomic status.

Results: Elective surgical cases were completed with an average surgical wait time of 28.11 ± 26.34 days. Urgent surgical cases were completed with an average surgical wait time of 1.23 ± 1.50 days. Patient race, sex, language, and socioeconomic status had no effect on surgical wait time for urgent case scheduling. Female patients had longer average wait times in elective cases, whereas race had a weak association with increased wait time. Two-factor interaction analysis showed no multifactorial effects of patient demographic factors on surgical wait time. Patient race and socioeconomic status were associated with increased distance from surgical sites, although increased distance did not correlate with increased surgical wait time.

Conclusion: Patient demographic factors did not demonstrate clinically notable associations with surgical timing in this patient cohort, in contrast to previous studies demonstrating the effects of race and socioeconomic status on healthcare outcomes and access. Race and socioeconomic status did correlate with increased distance from surgical centers although distance from surgical sites did not correlate with surgical wait time. This contributes to previous literature on healthcare equity and indicates that surgical wait time may not contribute to the known healthcare inequalities seen in minority and marginalized patients.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
282
审稿时长
8 weeks
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