Jacobson Jerry O, Robinson Paul L, Bluthenthal Ricky N
Strategic Information Unit, Global AIDS Program, Central America and Panama, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Universidad del Valle, 18 Av. 11-37, VH III, Edificio GAP, Zona 15, CP 01015, Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala.
Health Serv Res. 2007 Apr;42(2):773-94. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00612.x.
To assess racial and ethnic differences in rates of completion from publicly funded alcohol treatment programs, and to estimate the extent to which any identified racial differences in completion rates are related to differences in patient characteristics.
Administrative intake and discharge records from all publicly funded outpatient and residential alcohol treatment recovery programs in Los Angeles County (LAC) during 1998-2000. Study participants (N=10,591) are African American, Hispanic, and white patients discharged from these programs, ages 18 or older, who reported alcohol as their primary substance abuse problem.
Bivariate tests identified racial and ethnic differences in rates of treatment completion and patient characteristics. Logistic regression models assessed the contribution of differences in patient characteristics to differences in completion.
Significantly lower completion rates by African Americans (17.5 percent) relative to whites (26.7 percent) (odds ratio [OR]=0.58, 95 percent confidence interval [CI]: 0.50-0.68) are partially explained (40 percent) by differences in patient characteristics in outpatient care (adjusted OR=0.75, 95 percent CI: 0.63-0.90), mostly by indicators of economic resources (i.e., employment, homelessness, and Medi-Cal beneficiary). In residential care, only 7 percent of differences in completion (30.7 versus 46.1 percent) could be explained by the patient-level measures available (OR=0.52, 95 percent CI: 0.45-0.59; AOR=0.55, 95 percent CI: 0.47-0.65). Differences in completion rates between Hispanic and white patients were not detected.
Large differences in rates of outpatient and residential alcohol treatment completion between African American and white patients at publicly funded programs in LAC, the nation's second largest, publicly funded alcohol and drug treatment system, are partially because of economic differences among patients, but remain largely unexplained. These racial disparities merit additional investigation and the attention of health professionals.
评估公共资助酒精治疗项目的完成率中的种族和民族差异,并估计所发现的完成率方面的任何种族差异与患者特征差异的相关程度。
1998 - 2000年洛杉矶县(LAC)所有公共资助的门诊和住院酒精治疗康复项目的行政入院和出院记录。研究参与者(N = 10591)为从这些项目出院的非裔美国人、西班牙裔和白人患者,年龄在18岁及以上,他们报告酒精是其主要药物滥用问题。
双变量检验确定了治疗完成率和患者特征方面的种族和民族差异。逻辑回归模型评估了患者特征差异对完成率差异的影响。
非裔美国人的完成率(17.5%)显著低于白人(26.7%)(优势比[OR]=0.58,95%置信区间[CI]:0.50 - 0.68),门诊护理中患者特征差异部分解释了这一现象(40%)(调整后OR = 0.75,95% CI:0.63 - 0.90),主要是经济资源指标(即就业、无家可归和加州医疗补助受益人)。在住院护理中,可用的患者层面指标仅能解释完成率差异的7%(30.7%对46.1%)(OR = 0.52,95% CI:0.45 - 0.59;调整后OR = 0.55,95% CI:0.47 - 0.65)。未检测到西班牙裔和白人患者之间的完成率差异。
在全国第二大公共资助的酒精和药物治疗系统——洛杉矶县的公共资助项目中,非裔美国人和白人患者在门诊和住院酒精治疗完成率上存在巨大差异,部分原因是患者之间的经济差异,但在很大程度上仍无法解释。这些种族差异值得进一步调查以及健康专业人员的关注。