在急诊科疼痛患者的分类文件中,污名化语言的流行。

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Christopher M. Fung MD, MS , Adrianne Kehne BS , Colin Macleod MA , Caroline Logue MPH , Pooja Lagisetty MD, MS
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:医学文献中的污名化语言很普遍,并且与种族、性别、年龄和体重有关。分诊记录可能会对下游护理产生巨大的影响,在他们自己的评估之前将信息传达给其他临床医生。目的:本研究的目的是确定疼痛相关急诊科(ED)就诊的分类记录中污名化语言的流行程度。方法:我们在一家城市学术急诊科进行了一项横断面研究。从电子健康记录中提取了2017年至2021年间胸部、腹部、头痛、背部和损伤相关疼痛患者的分诊记录。从现有文献中先验地创造了一个污名化词汇词典。描述性统计用于报告按疼痛类型、人口统计学和急性程度划分的污名化语言的频率(紧急严重程度指数,ESI)。使用Logistic广义估计方程来估计这些协变量与污名化语言之间的关联。结果:共纳入51570例急诊科就诊。2691份分类记录(5.2%)包含至少一个侮辱性词语。男性性别(OR: 1.21 95%CI[1.12, 1.31])、黑人种族(1.11[1.01,1.23])、医疗补助(1.29[1.17,1.44])和医疗保险(1.22[1.11,1.34])与污名化语言的高发生率相关。与腹痛相比,背部疼痛(0.58[0.49,0.69])和损伤相关疼痛(0.54[0.47,0.62])的发生率较低。与ESI-2相比,低视力访问(ESI-3 0.77[0.70, 0.84]和ESI-4 0.52[0.42, 0.64])的风险较低。结论:每20个因疼痛就诊的患者中就有1个使用侮辱性语言,这在男性、黑人患者和有政府保险的患者中尤为普遍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prevalence of Stigmatizing Language in the Triage Documentation of Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department with Pain

Background

Stigmatizing language in medical documentation is prevalent and associated with race, gender, age, and weight. Triage documentation may impart an outsized effect on downstream care, communicating information to other clinicians prior to their own evaluation.

Objective

The goal of this study was to determine the prevalence of stigmatizing language in triage notes for pain-related emergency department (ED) visits.

Methods

We performed a cross-sectional study at an urban academic ED. Triage notes between 2017 and 2021 for patients presenting with chest, abdominal, headache, back and injury-related pain were extracted from the electronic health record. A lexicon of stigmatizing words was created a priori from existing literature. Descriptive statistics were used to report the frequency of stigmatizing language by pain type, demographics, and acuity (Emergency Severity Index, ESI). Logistic generalized estimating equations were used to estimate the association between these covariates and stigmatizing language.

Results

A total of 51,570 ED visits were included. 2691 triage notes (5.2%) contained at least one stigmatizing word. Male gender (OR: 1.21 95%CI [1.12, 1.31]), Black race (1.11 [1.01, 1.23]), Medicaid (1.29 [1.17, 1.44]) and Medicare (1.22 [1.11, 1.34) insurance were associated with higher odds of stigmatizing language. Back (0.58 [0.49, 0.69]) and injury-related (0.54 [0.47, 0.62]) pain were associated with lower odds compared to visits for abdominal pain. Lower acuity visits (ESI-3 0.77 [0.70, 0.84] and ESI-4 0.52 [0.42, 0.64]) were associated with lower odds when compared to ESI-2.

Conclusions

Stigmatizing language is present in roughly 1 in 20 visits for pain and is disproportionality prevalent in males, Black patients, and those with government insurance.
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来源期刊
Journal of Emergency Medicine
Journal of Emergency Medicine 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
339
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Emergency Medicine is an international, peer-reviewed publication featuring original contributions of interest to both the academic and practicing emergency physician. JEM, published monthly, contains research papers and clinical studies as well as articles focusing on the training of emergency physicians and on the practice of emergency medicine. The Journal features the following sections: • Original Contributions • Clinical Communications: Pediatric, Adult, OB/GYN • Selected Topics: Toxicology, Prehospital Care, The Difficult Airway, Aeromedical Emergencies, Disaster Medicine, Cardiology Commentary, Emergency Radiology, Critical Care, Sports Medicine, Wound Care • Techniques and Procedures • Technical Tips • Clinical Laboratory in Emergency Medicine • Pharmacology in Emergency Medicine • Case Presentations of the Harvard Emergency Medicine Residency • Visual Diagnosis in Emergency Medicine • Medical Classics • Emergency Forum • Editorial(s) • Letters to the Editor • Education • Administration of Emergency Medicine • International Emergency Medicine • Computers in Emergency Medicine • Violence: Recognition, Management, and Prevention • Ethics • Humanities and Medicine • American Academy of Emergency Medicine • AAEM Medical Student Forum • Book and Other Media Reviews • Calendar of Events • Abstracts • Trauma Reports • Ultrasound in Emergency Medicine
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