Odonkor Charles A, Esparza Rachel, Flores Laura E, Verduzco-Gutierrez Monica, Escalon Miguel X, Solinsky Ryan, Silver Julie K
Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Division of Physiatry, Yale School of Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT, USA.
Yale School of Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT, USA.
PM R. 2021 Feb;13(2):180-203. doi: 10.1002/pmrj.12509. Epub 2020 Dec 5.
Racial health disparities continue to disproportionately affect Black persons in the United States. Black individuals also have increased risk of worse outcomes associated with social determinants of health including socioeconomic factors such as income, education, and employment. This narrative review included studies originally spanning a period of approximately one decade (December 2009-December 2019) from online databases and with subsequent updates though June 2020. The findings to date suggest pervasive inequities across common conditions and injuries in physical medicine and rehabilitation for this group compared to other racial/ethnic groups. We found health disparities across several domains for Black persons with stroke, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, hip/knee osteoarthritis, and fractures, as well as cardiovascular and pulmonary disease. Although more research is needed, some contributing factors include low access to rehabilitation care, fewer referrals, lower utilization rates, perceived bias, and more self-reliance, even after adjusting for hospital characteristics, age, disease severity, and relevant socioeconomic variables. Some studies found that Black individuals were less likely to receive care that was concordant with clinical guidelines per the reported literature. Our review highlights many gaps in the literature on racial disparities that are particularly notable in cardiac, pulmonary, and critical care rehabilitation. Clinicians, researchers, and policy makers should therefore consider race and ethnicity as important factors as we strive to optimize rehabilitation care for an increasingly diverse U.S. population.
种族健康差异继续对美国黑人产生不成比例的影响。黑人因包括收入、教育和就业等社会经济因素在内的健康社会决定因素而出现不良后果的风险也更高。这篇叙述性综述纳入了最初来自在线数据库、时间跨度约为十年(2009年12月至2019年12月)且截至2020年6月有后续更新的研究。迄今为止的研究结果表明,与其他种族/族裔群体相比,该群体在物理医学与康复领域的常见疾病和损伤方面普遍存在不平等现象。我们发现,患有中风、创伤性脑损伤、脊髓损伤、髋/膝骨关节炎和骨折以及心血管和肺部疾病的黑人在多个领域存在健康差异。尽管还需要更多研究,但一些促成因素包括康复护理的可及性低、转诊较少、利用率较低、感知到的偏见以及更多的自力更生,即使在对医院特征、年龄、疾病严重程度和相关社会经济变量进行调整之后也是如此。一些研究发现,根据所报道的文献,黑人接受符合临床指南的护理的可能性较小。我们的综述突出了文献中关于种族差异的许多空白,这些空白在心脏、肺部和重症监护康复领域尤为明显。因此,在我们努力为日益多样化的美国人口优化康复护理时,临床医生、研究人员和政策制定者应将种族和族裔视为重要因素。