Miranda Jeanne, Duan Naihua, Sherbourne Cathy, Schoenbaum Michael, Lagomasino Isabel, Jackson-Triche Maga, Wells Kenneth B
Department of Psychiatry, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2003 Apr;38(2):613-30. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.00136.
Ethnic minority patients often receive poorer quality care and have worse outcomes than white patients, yet practice-based approaches to reduce such disparities have not been identified. We determined whether practice-initiated quality improvement (QI) interventions for depressed primary care patients improve care across ethnic groups and reduce outcome disparities.
The sample consists of 46 primary care practices in 6 U.S. managed care organizations; 181 clinicians; 398 Latinos, 93 African Americans, and 778 white patients with probable depressive disorder. STUDY DEIGN: Matched practices were randomized to usual care or one of two QI programs that trained local experts to educate clinicians; nurses to educate, assess, and follow-up with patients; and psychotherapists to conduct Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Patients and physicians selected treatments. Interventions featured modest accommodations for minority patients (e.g., translations, cultural training for clinicians).
Multilevel logistic regression analyses assessed intervention effects within and among ethnic groups.
At baseline, all ethnic groups Latino, African American, white) had low to moderate rates of appropriate care and the interventions significantly improved appropriate care at six months (by 8-20 percentage points) within each ethnic group, with no significant difference in response by ethnic group. The interventions significantly decreased the likelihood that Latinos and African Americans would report probable depression at months 6 and 12; the white intervention sample did not differ from controls in reported probable depression at either follow-up. While the intervention significantly improved the rate of employment for whites and not for minorities, precision was low for comparing intervention response on this outcome. It is important to note that minorities remained less likely to have appropriate care and more likely to be depressed than white patients.
Implementation of quality improvement interventions that have modest accommodations for minority patients can improve quality of care for whites and underserved minorities alike, while minorities may be especially likely to benefit clinically. Further research needs to clarify whether employment benefits are limited to whites and if so, whether this represents a difference in opportunities. Quality improvement programs appear to improve quality of care without increasing disparities, and may offer an approach to reduce health disparities.
少数族裔患者通常比白人患者获得的医疗质量更差,治疗结果也更糟,但尚未找到基于实践的方法来减少此类差异。我们确定了针对初级保健中抑郁患者的实践发起的质量改进(QI)干预措施是否能改善各民族的医疗服务并减少结果差异。
样本包括美国6家管理式医疗组织中的46个初级保健机构;181名临床医生;398名拉丁裔、93名非裔美国人和778名可能患有抑郁症的白人患者。研究设计:配对的机构被随机分配到常规护理组或两个QI项目之一,这两个项目培训当地专家对临床医生进行教育;培训护士对患者进行教育、评估和随访;培训心理治疗师进行认知行为疗法。患者和医生选择治疗方法。干预措施对少数族裔患者有适度的调整(例如,翻译、为临床医生提供文化培训)。
多级逻辑回归分析评估了各民族内部和之间的干预效果。
在基线时,所有民族(拉丁裔、非裔美国人、白人)的适当护理率都处于低到中等水平,干预措施在6个月时显著改善了每个民族的适当护理(提高了8 - 20个百分点),各民族的反应没有显著差异。干预措施显著降低了拉丁裔和非裔美国人在6个月和12个月时报告可能患抑郁症的可能性;在两次随访中,白人干预样本在报告可能患抑郁症方面与对照组没有差异。虽然干预措施显著提高了白人的就业率,而对少数族裔没有,但在比较该结果的干预反应时精度较低。需要注意的是,少数族裔获得适当护理的可能性仍然低于白人患者,且患抑郁症的可能性更高。
实施对少数族裔患者有适度调整的质量改进干预措施,可以提高白人和服务不足的少数族裔的医疗质量,而少数族裔在临床上可能尤其容易受益。进一步研究需要阐明就业福利是否仅限于白人,如果是,这是否代表机会差异。质量改进项目似乎在不增加差异的情况下提高了医疗质量,并可能提供一种减少健康差异的方法。