Bluthenthal Ricky N, Jacobson Jerry O, Robinson Paul L
Health Program and Drug Policy Research Center, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California 90407-2138, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007 Nov;31(11):1920-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2007.00515.x. Epub 2007 Sep 26.
To determine whether racial and ethnic disparities in publicly funded alcohol treatment completion are due to racial differences in attending outpatient and residential treatment.
Statistical analysis of alcohol treatment completion rates using alcohol treatment patients' discharge records from all publicly funded treatment facilities in Los Angeles County from 1998 to 2000 (n = 10,591).
Among these patients, African American (OR = 0.52; 95% CI 0.47, 0.57) and Hispanic (OR = 0.89; 95% CI 0.81, 0.99) patients were significantly less likely to complete treatment as compared with White patients. We found that the odds of being in outpatient versus residential care were 1.42 (95% CI 1.29, 1.55) and 2.05 (95% CI 1.85, 2.26) for African American and Hispanic alcohol treatment patients, respectively, compared with White patients. Adjusting for addiction characteristics, employment, other patient-level factors that might influence treatment enrollment, and unobserved facility-level differences through a random effects regression model, these odds increased to 1.89 (95% CI 1.22, 2.94) for African American and to 2.12 (95% CI 1.40, 3.21) for Hispanics. We developed a conditional probability model to assess the contribution of racial differences in treatment modality to racial disparities in treatment completion. Estimates from this model indicate that were African American and Hispanic patients observed in outpatient care in this population to have the same probability of receiving residential care as White patients with otherwise similar characteristics, the White-African American difference in completion rates would be reduced from 13.64% (95% CI 11.58%, 15.71%) to 11.09% (95% CI 8.77%, 13.23%) and the White-Hispanic difference would disappear, changing from 2.63% (95% CI 0.29%, 4.95%) to -0.45% (-3.52%, 2.43%).
It appears that reductions in racial disparities in treatment completion could be gained by increasing enrollment in residential alcohol treatment for African American and Hispanic alcohol abusers in Los Angeles County. Further research addressing why minority alcohol abusers are less likely to receive residential alcohol treatment should be conducted, as well as research that examines why African American alcohol treatment patients have lower completion rates as compared with White patients regardless of treatment modality.
确定公共资助的酒精治疗完成情况中的种族和民族差异是否归因于门诊和住院治疗参与率的种族差异。
利用1998年至2000年洛杉矶县所有公共资助治疗机构的酒精治疗患者出院记录(n = 10,591)对酒精治疗完成率进行统计分析。
在这些患者中,与白人患者相比,非裔美国患者(比值比[OR]=0.52;95%可信区间[CI]0.47,0.57)和西班牙裔患者(OR = 0.89;95% CI 0.81,0.99)完成治疗的可能性显著更低。我们发现,与白人患者相比,非裔美国和西班牙裔酒精治疗患者接受门诊治疗与住院治疗的比值分别为1.42(95% CI 1.29,1.55)和2.05(95% CI 1.85,2.26)。通过随机效应回归模型对成瘾特征、就业情况、其他可能影响治疗登记的患者层面因素以及未观察到的机构层面差异进行调整后,非裔美国患者的这一比值增至1.89(95% CI 1.22,2.94),西班牙裔患者增至2.12(95% CI 1.40,3.21)。我们建立了一个条件概率模型,以评估治疗方式上的种族差异对治疗完成情况种族差异的影响。该模型的估计结果表明,若该人群中接受门诊治疗的非裔美国和西班牙裔患者与具有相似特征的白人患者接受住院治疗的概率相同,那么白人-非裔美国患者在完成率上的差异将从13.64%(95% CI 11.58%,15.71%)降至11.09%(95% CI 8.77%,13.23%),白人-西班牙裔患者的差异将消失,从2.63%(95% CI 0.29%,4.95%)变为-0.45%(-3.52%,2.43%)。
看来,通过增加洛杉矶县非裔美国和西班牙裔酒精滥用者的住院酒精治疗登记人数,可减少治疗完成情况中的种族差异。应进一步开展研究,探讨少数族裔酒精滥用者接受住院酒精治疗可能性较低的原因,并研究为何无论治疗方式如何,非裔美国酒精治疗患者的完成率均低于白人患者。