From the *Brigham and Women's Hospital, Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy, Boston; †University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center, Division of Hospital Medicine, Worcester; and ‡Center for Community Health Education Research and Service, Inc; and §Division of Pharmacoepidemiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
J Clin Rheumatol. 2013 Oct;19(7):361-6. doi: 10.1097/RHU.0b013e3182a6a490.
Access to rheumatology care can expedite diagnosis and treatment of rheumatic diseases and reduce disparities. We surveyed community health center (CHC) medical directors to evaluate rheumatology care in underserved areas and potential strategies for improvement.
We identified 77 Massachusetts CHCs that provide adult medical services and sent a 40-item survey to their physician medical directors. Survey questions assessed the centers' prevalence of rheumatic diseases, prescribing practices of immunosuppressive medications, and possible interventions to improve care. We compared CHC characteristics and rheumatology-specific items and then stratified our data by the response to whether improved access to rheumatology care was needed. Qualitative data were analyzed thematically.
Thirty-six CHC physician medical directors returned surveys (47% response rate). Fifty-five percent indicated a need for better access to rheumatology care. Eighty-six percent of CHC physicians would not start a patient with rheumatoid arthritis on a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; 94% would not start a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus on an immunosuppressant. When we compared CHCs that reported needing better access to rheumatology care to those that did not, the former described a significantly greater percentage of patients with private insurance or Medicaid who required outside rheumatology referrals (P < 0.05). Language differences and insurance status were highlighted as barriers to obtaining rheumatology care. Sixteen directors (57%) ranked the patient navigator-a layperson to assist with care coordination-as their first-choice intervention.
Community health center medical directors expressed a need for better access to rheumatology services. A patient navigator for rheumatic diseases was proposed to help improve care and reduce health disparities.
获得风湿病学治疗可加快风湿性疾病的诊断和治疗,并减少差异。我们调查了社区卫生中心(CHC)的医疗主任,以评估服务不足地区的风湿病学护理情况和改善的潜在策略。
我们确定了 77 家提供成人医疗服务的马萨诸塞州 CHC,并向其医生医疗主任发送了 40 项调查。调查问题评估了中心风湿性疾病的患病率,免疫抑制剂的处方实践以及改善护理的可能干预措施。我们比较了 CHC 的特征和风湿病学特定项目,然后根据对是否需要改善获得风湿病学护理的反应对数据进行分层。对定性数据进行了主题分析。
36 名 CHC 医生医疗主任返回了调查(47%的回复率)。55%表示需要更好地获得风湿病学护理。86%的 CHC 医生不会开始给类风湿关节炎患者使用疾病修饰抗风湿药物;94%的医生不会给系统性红斑狼疮患者开免疫抑制剂。当我们将报告需要更好地获得风湿病学护理的 CHC 与没有报告的 CHC 进行比较时,前者描述了需要外部风湿病学转介的具有私人保险或医疗补助的患者比例明显更高(P <0.05)。语言差异和保险状况被强调为获得风湿病学护理的障碍。16 位主任(57%)将患者导航员(协助护理协调的非专业人员)列为他们的首选干预措施。
社区卫生中心医疗主任表示需要更好地获得风湿病学服务。建议使用风湿病患者导航员来帮助改善护理并减少健康差异。