*Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System, VA Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion †Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine ‡Department of Biostatistics, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA §Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Informatics and Analytics, Durham, NC.
Med Care. 2014 Apr;52(4):328-35. doi: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000099.
Few studies have assessed sex or racial/ethnic differences in inpatient experiences in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System.
This study aimed to compare inpatient experiences by sex and race/ethnicity within and between VA hospitals.
We used mixed-effects multinomial regression to assess within-facility and between-facility sex and racial/ethnic differences in the 2010 VA Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients.
50,471 respondents from 144 VA hospitals (4.5% female; 75.4% non-Hispanic white, 14.7% non-Hispanic black, 5.4% Hispanic, and 4.4% other race/ethnicity).
Negative and positive patient-reported experiences in 13 health care domains were included.
Adjusted within-facility sex differences indicated that women reported more negative and less positive experiences than men in 4 domains, and less negative and more positive experiences on domains related to noise and privacy. Patients at facilities with more female patients reported more negative and less positive experiences in 4 domains. Blacks and Hispanics reported less negative and/or more positive experiences than whites within the same facility, although patients at facilities with more black and Hispanic patients reported more negative and less positive experiences overall. There were few and inconsistent within-facility differences between other racial/ethnic patients and whites. Patients at facilities with more other racial/ethnic patients reported slightly less negative and more positive experiences.
Male, black, and Hispanic patients treated in VA hospitals tend to report more positive experiences than female and white patients treated at the same facilities. However, less positive experiences are reported by patients overall in hospitals that serve larger populations of women and racial/ethnic minorities.
鲜有研究评估退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗保健系统中住院患者经历的性别或种族/民族差异。
本研究旨在比较 VA 医院内和医院间的性别和种族/民族差异的住院患者经历。
我们使用混合效应多项回归来评估 2010 年 VA 患者医疗体验调查中 144 家 VA 医院内和医院间的性别和种族/民族差异。
来自 144 家 VA 医院的 50471 名受访者(4.5%为女性;75.4%为非西班牙裔白人,14.7%为非西班牙裔黑人,5.4%为西班牙裔,4.4%为其他种族/民族)。
包括 13 个医疗保健领域的负面和正面的患者报告体验。
调整后的医院内性别差异表明,女性在 4 个领域报告的负面体验多于男性,而在与噪音和隐私相关的领域报告的负面体验少于男性,正面体验多于男性。在女性患者较多的医院中,患者报告的 4 个领域的负面体验更多,正面体验更少。黑人患者和西班牙裔患者在同一医院内报告的负面体验少于白人,而正面体验多于白人,尽管在黑人患者和西班牙裔患者较多的医院中,患者报告的负面体验更多,正面体验更少。在其他种族/民族的患者与白人之间,很少有且不一致的医院内差异。在女性和其他种族/民族患者较多的医院中,患者报告的负面体验略少,正面体验略多。
在 VA 医院接受治疗的男性、黑人患者和西班牙裔患者的正面体验报告多于在同一医院接受治疗的女性和白人患者。然而,在服务于更多女性和少数族裔人群的医院中,患者的整体正面体验报告较少。