Katz Patricia P, Barton Jennifer, Trupin Laura, Schmajuk Gabriela, Yazdany Jinoos, Ruiz Pedro J, Yelin Edward
University of California, San Francisco.
Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, Oregon.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2016 May;68(5):621-8. doi: 10.1002/acr.22748.
Despite advances in therapies, disparities in outcomes have been documented for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients for both ethnicity and English language proficiency. The goals of these analyses were to compare differences in RA patient-reported outcomes, by both self-identification of ethnicity and English language proficiency, and to identify factors that might explain differences among groups.
Data were collected through structured telephone interviews of a longitudinal cohort with physician-diagnosed RA (n = 438); only women were included (n = 335). Three groups were defined based on self-reported ethnicity and English proficiency: white/English (n = 219), Hispanic/English (n = 39), and Hispanic/Spanish (n = 77). Outcomes examined were patient-reported physical functioning, pain, and presence of moderate or severe fatigue. Multivariate regression analyses compared outcomes among groups, adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, health and disease factors, and depression.
Hispanic/Spanish women had worse function, pain, and fatigue than either English-proficient group. Depression was associated with all outcomes (P < 0.0001), and accounted for greater differentials in scores than ethnicity/language proficiency. In interaction analyses, differences between women who were and were not depressed were greater for Hispanic/English than for Hispanic/Spanish. Nondepressed Hispanic/Spanish scores were significantly worse than nondepressed Hispanic/English, i.e., the impact of depression was less for Hispanic/Spanish women because both depressed and nondepressed women in this group reported worse outcomes. After adjustment for sociodemographic factors and depression, language remained significantly associated with outcomes.
Disparities in patient-reported outcomes may be driven less by ethnicity than by sociodemographic or psychological factors. Measurement instruments that are not culturally appropriate and equivalent may also hamper meaningful analyses of disparities.
尽管治疗方法有所进步,但类风湿关节炎(RA)患者在种族和英语语言能力方面的治疗结果差异已被记录在案。这些分析的目的是通过种族自我认同和英语语言能力来比较RA患者报告的结果差异,并确定可能解释组间差异的因素。
通过对纵向队列中经医生诊断为RA的患者(n = 438)进行结构化电话访谈收集数据;仅纳入女性(n = 335)。根据自我报告的种族和英语水平定义了三组:白人/英语组(n = 219)、西班牙裔/英语组(n = 39)和西班牙裔/西班牙语组(n = 77)。所检查的结果包括患者报告的身体功能、疼痛以及中度或重度疲劳的存在情况。多变量回归分析比较了各组之间的结果,并对社会人口统计学特征、健康和疾病因素以及抑郁进行了调整。
西班牙裔/西班牙语组的女性在功能、疼痛和疲劳方面比任何一个英语熟练组都更差。抑郁与所有结果相关(P < 0.0001),并且在分数差异中所占比例大于种族/语言能力。在交互分析中,西班牙裔/英语组中抑郁和未抑郁女性之间的差异大于西班牙裔/西班牙语组。未抑郁的西班牙裔/西班牙语组的分数明显低于未抑郁的西班牙裔/英语组,即抑郁对西班牙裔/西班牙语组女性的影响较小,因为该组中抑郁和未抑郁的女性报告的结果都较差。在对社会人口统计学因素和抑郁进行调整后,语言仍然与结果显著相关。
患者报告结果的差异可能更多地是由社会人口统计学或心理因素而非种族驱动的。在文化上不适当和不等同的测量工具也可能妨碍对差异进行有意义的分析。