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RAND Corporation, 4570 Fifth Ave #600, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2022 Jan;37(1):49-56. doi: 10.1007/s11606-021-06738-0. Epub 2021 Apr 5.
Previous work has demonstrated racial/ethnic differences in emergency department (ED) utilization, but less is known about racial/ethnic differences in the experience of care received during an ED visit.
To examine differences in self-reported healthcare utilization and experiences with ED care by patients' race/ethnicity.
Adult ED patients discharged to community (DTC) were surveyed (response rate: 20.25%) using the Emergency Department Patient Experience of Care (EDPEC) DTC Survey. Linear regression was used to estimate case-mix-adjusted differences in patient experience between racial/ethnic groups.
3122 survey respondents who were discharged from the EDs of 50 hospitals nationwide January-March 2016.
Six measures: getting timely care, doctor and nurse communication, communication about medications, receipt of sufficient information about test results, whether hospital staff discussed the patient's ability to receive follow-up care, and willingness to recommend the ED.
Black and Hispanic patients were significantly more likely than White patients to report visiting the ED for an ongoing health condition (40% Black, 30% Hispanic, 28% White, p<0.001), report having visited an ED 3+ times in the last 6 months (26% Black, 25% Hispanic, 19% White, p<0.001), and report not having a usual source of care (19% Black, 19% Hispanic, 8% White, p<0.001). Compared with White patients, Hispanic patients more often reported that hospital staff talked with them about their ability to receive needed follow-up care (+7.2 percentile points, p=0.038) and recommended the ED (+7.2 points, p=0.037); Hispanic and Black patients reported better doctor and nurse communication (+6.4 points, p=0.008; +4 points, p=0.036, respectively).
Hispanic and Black ED patients reported higher ED utilization, lacked a usual source of care, and reported better experience with ED care than White patients. Results may reflect differences in care delivery by staff and/or different expectations of ED care among Hispanic and Black patients.
先前的研究表明,在急诊科(ED)的利用方面存在种族/民族差异,但对于在 ED 就诊期间所接受的护理体验方面的种族/民族差异知之甚少。
通过患者的种族/民族来检查自我报告的医疗保健利用情况和 ED 护理体验方面的差异。
使用急诊患者护理体验(EDPEC)出院患者调查,对全国 50 家医院的出院 ED 患者(应答率:20.25%)进行调查。使用线性回归来估计种族/民族群体之间在患者体验方面的混杂调整差异。
2016 年 1 月至 3 月期间,从全国 50 家医院的 ED 出院的 3122 名调查对象。
六个措施:及时获得护理、医生和护士的沟通、药物沟通、获得足够的测试结果信息、医院工作人员是否讨论了患者接受后续护理的能力、以及对 ED 的推荐意愿。
黑人和西班牙裔患者比白人患者更有可能报告因持续健康状况而就诊于 ED(40%黑人、30%西班牙裔、28%白人,p<0.001),报告在过去 6 个月内就诊于 ED 3 次或以上(26%黑人、25%西班牙裔、19%白人,p<0.001),并且报告没有常规医疗来源(19%黑人、19%西班牙裔、8%白人,p<0.001)。与白人患者相比,西班牙裔患者更经常报告医院工作人员与他们讨论了他们接受所需后续护理的能力(+7.2 个百分点,p=0.038),并且推荐了 ED(+7.2 分,p=0.037);西班牙裔和黑人患者报告医生和护士的沟通更好(+6.4 分,p=0.008;+4 分,p=0.036)。
西班牙裔和黑人 ED 患者报告 ED 就诊率较高,缺乏常规医疗来源,并且对 ED 护理的体验优于白人患者。结果可能反映了工作人员在护理方面的差异,以及西班牙裔和黑人患者对 ED 护理的不同期望。