VA HSR&D Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation, & Policy (Health Equity-QUERI National Partnered Evaluation Center), VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, Department of Medicine, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 12;15(10):e0240306. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240306. eCollection 2020.
Patient-centered medical homes (PCMH) are primary care delivery models that improve care access and population-level health outcomes, yet they have not been observed to narrow racial-ethnic disparities in the Veteran Health Administration (VHA) or other health systems. We aimed to identify and compare underlying drivers of persistent hypertension and diabetes control differences between non-Hispanic Black (Black) and Hispanic versus non-Hispanic White (White) patients before and after PCMH implementation in the VHA. Among Black and Hispanic versus White VHA primary care patients in 2009 (nhypertension = 26,906; ndiabetes = 21,141) and 2014 (nhypertension = 83,809; ndiabetes = 38,887), we retrospectively examined hypertension control (blood pressure<140/90) and diabetes control (hemoglobin A1c <9) obtained through random chart abstraction of patient health records nationally via VHA's quality monitoring program. We fit linear probability regression models, adjusting for age, gender, comorbidity, and socioeconomic status (SES). Blinder-Oaxaca and Smith-Welch decomposition methods were used to parse out explained and unexplained contributors to health disparity between racial-ethnic groups pre- and post-PCMH implementation. Compared to White patients, hypertension and diabetes control remained significantly lower for Black (-6.2%[0.4%] and -3.1%[0.6%], respectively; p's<0.001) and Hispanic (-1.4%[0.8%] and -4.0%[1.0%], respectively; p's<0.001) patients following VHA PCMH implementation. Most racial-ethnic differences (55.7-92.3%; all p<0.05) were not attributed to age, gender, comorbidity, and SES. The contribution of explained versus unexplained factors did not significantly change over time. While many explanations for persistent racial-ethnic disparities in disease control among veterans exist, our study did not find that it was due to an influx of "sick" or "socioeconomically vulnerable" patients into the VHA following PCMH implementation. Instead, unexplained differences may be due to differential healthcare and community experiences (e.g., discrimination). Understanding underlying pathways leading to health disparities will better inform policy and clinical interventions to improve PCMH care delivery to racial-ethnic minority patients in health systems.
患者为中心的医疗之家(PCMH)是改善医疗服务可及性和人群健康结果的初级保健提供模式,但在退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)或其他卫生系统中,并未观察到它们能缩小种族和民族差异。我们旨在确定并比较在 VHA 实施 PCMH 前后,非西班牙裔黑人(黑人)和西班牙裔与非西班牙裔白人(白人)患者中持续高血压和糖尿病控制差异的潜在驱动因素。在 2009 年(高血压患者 n=26906;糖尿病患者 n=21141)和 2014 年(高血压患者 n=83809;糖尿病患者 n=38887)的 VHA 初级保健黑人患者和西班牙裔患者与白人患者中,我们通过 VHA 的质量监测计划,从全国范围内的患者健康记录中随机抽取图表,回顾性地检查高血压控制(血压<140/90)和糖尿病控制(血红蛋白 A1c<9)。我们使用线性概率回归模型,根据年龄、性别、合并症和社会经济地位(SES)进行调整。使用 Blinder-Oaxaca 和 Smith-Welch 分解方法来解析实施 PCMH 前后种族和民族群体之间健康差异的解释和未解释的贡献。与白人患者相比,黑人患者(-6.2%[0.4%]和-3.1%[0.6%];p 值均<0.001)和西班牙裔患者(-1.4%[0.8%]和-4.0%[1.0%];p 值均<0.001)的高血压和糖尿病控制仍然明显较低。大多数种族和民族差异(55.7-92.3%;所有 p 值均<0.05)与年龄、性别、合并症和 SES 无关。解释因素和未解释因素的贡献随时间变化不大。虽然退伍军人中疾病控制持续存在种族和民族差异有很多解释,但我们的研究并未发现这是由于 PCMH 实施后有大量“生病”或“社会经济脆弱”的患者涌入 VHA 造成的。相反,未解释的差异可能是由于医疗保健和社区体验的差异(例如,歧视)所致。了解导致健康差异的潜在途径将更好地为政策和临床干预提供信息,以改善卫生系统中少数族裔患者的 PCMH 护理提供。