Shaparin Naum, White Robert, Andreae Michael, Hall Charles, Kaufman Andrew
Montefiore Pain Center, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; Department of Anesthesiology, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
Department of Anesthesiology, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
J Pain. 2014 Jul;15(7):704-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2014.03.004. Epub 2014 Apr 18.
Patients often fail to attend appointments in chronic pain clinics for unknown reasons. We hypothesized that certain patient characteristics predict failure to attend scheduled appointments, pointing to systematic barriers to accessing chronic pain services for certain underserved populations. We collected retrospective data from a longitudinal observational cohort of patients at an academic pain clinic in Newark, New Jersey. To examine the effect of demographic factors on appointment status, we fit a marginal logistic regression using generalized estimating equations with exchangeable correlation. A total of 1,394 patients with 3,488 total encounters between January 1, 2006, and December 31, 2009, were included. Spanish spoken as a primary language (alternatively Hispanic or other race) and living between 5 and 10 miles from the clinic were associated with reduced odds of arriving for an appointment; making an appointment for a particular complaint such as cancer pain or back pain, an interventional pain procedure scheduled in connection with the appointment, unemployed status, and continuity of care (as measured by office visit number) were associated with increased odds of arriving. Spanish spoken as a primary language and distance to the pain clinic predicted failure to attend a scheduled appointment in our cohort. If these constitute systematic barriers to access, they may be amenable to targeted interventions.
We identified certain patient characteristics, specifically Spanish spoken as a primary language and geographic distance from the clinic, that predict failure to attend an inner-city chronic pain clinic. These identified barriers to accessing chronic pain services may be modifiable by simple cost-effective interventions.
患者常常无故不参加慢性疼痛诊所的预约。我们推测某些患者特征可预测是否会爽约,这表明某些服务不足人群在获取慢性疼痛服务方面存在系统性障碍。我们从新泽西州纽瓦克市一家学术性疼痛诊所的纵向观察队列中收集了回顾性数据。为了研究人口统计学因素对预约状态的影响,我们使用具有可交换相关性的广义估计方程拟合了边际逻辑回归。研究纳入了2006年1月1日至2009年12月31日期间共有3488次就诊的1394名患者。以西班牙语为主要语言(或者为西班牙裔或其他种族)且居住在距离诊所5至10英里之间与预约就诊几率降低相关;因特定主诉(如癌症疼痛或背痛)预约、预约时安排了介入性疼痛治疗、失业状态以及连续就诊情况(以就诊次数衡量)与就诊几率增加相关。在我们的队列中,以西班牙语为主要语言以及与疼痛诊所的距离可预测是否会爽约。如果这些构成了获取服务的系统性障碍,那么可能适合采取针对性干预措施。
我们确定了某些患者特征,特别是以西班牙语为主要语言以及与诊所的地理距离,这些特征可预测是否会不参加市中心慢性疼痛诊所的预约。这些已确定的获取慢性疼痛服务的障碍可能可通过简单且具成本效益的干预措施加以改变。