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医疗机构的隐性偏见影响美国儿科 1 型糖尿病技术推荐:来自把关人研究的结果。

Provider Implicit Bias Impacts Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Technology Recommendations in the United States: Findings from The Gatekeeper Study.

机构信息

Department of Pediatrics, Division of Endocrinology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.

Stanford Diabetes Research Center, Stanford, CA, USA.

出版信息

J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2021 Sep;15(5):1027-1033. doi: 10.1177/19322968211006476. Epub 2021 Apr 15.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Diabetes technology use is associated with favorable type 1 diabetes (T1D) outcomes. American youth with public insurance, a proxy for low socioeconomic status, use less diabetes technology than those with private insurance. We aimed to evaluate the role of insurance-mediated provider implicit bias, defined as the systematic discrimination of youth with public insurance, on diabetes technology recommendations for youth with T1D in the United States.

METHODS

Multi-disciplinary pediatric diabetes providers completed a bias assessment comprised of a clinical vignette and ranking exercises ( = 39). Provider bias was defined as providers: (1) recommending more technology for those on private insurance versus public insurance or (2) ranking insurance in the top 2 of 7 reasons to offer technology. Bias and provider characteristics were analyzed with descriptive statistics, group comparisons, and multivariate logistic regression.

RESULTS

The majority of providers [44.1 ± 10.0 years old, 83% female, 79% non-Hispanic white, 49% physician, 12.2 ± 10.0 practice-years] demonstrated bias ( = 33/39, 84.6%). Compared to the group without bias, the group with bias had practiced longer (13.4±10.4 years vs 5.7 ± 3.6 years,  = .003) but otherwise had similar characteristics including age (44.4 ± 10.2 vs 42.6 ± 10.1, p = 0.701). In the logistic regression, practice-years remained significant (OR = 1.47, 95% CI [1.02,2.13];  = .007) when age, sex, race/ethnicity, provider role, percent public insurance served, and workplace location were included.

CONCLUSIONS

Provider bias to recommend technology based on insurance was common in our cohort and increased with years in practice. There are likely many reasons for this finding, including healthcare system drivers, yet as gatekeepers to diabetes technology, providers may be contributing to inequities in pediatric T1D in the United States.

摘要

背景

糖尿病技术的使用与 1 型糖尿病(T1D)的良好结局相关。使用公共保险的美国青年,即社会经济地位较低的代表,比使用私人保险的青年使用的糖尿病技术更少。我们旨在评估保险介导的提供者隐性偏见的作用,该偏见定义为对使用公共保险的年轻人的系统歧视,以评估其对美国 T1D 青年的糖尿病技术推荐的影响。

方法

多学科儿科糖尿病提供者完成了一项偏见评估,其中包括临床病例和排名练习( = 39)。提供者偏见的定义为:(1)与私人保险相比,建议更多的技术用于公共保险,或(2)将保险排名在提供技术的 7 个原因中的前 2 位。使用描述性统计、组比较和多变量逻辑回归分析偏见和提供者特征。

结果

大多数提供者[44.1 ± 10.0 岁,83%为女性,79%为非西班牙裔白人,49%为医生,12.2 ± 10.0 年实践经验]表现出偏见( = 33/39,84.6%)。与无偏见组相比,有偏见组的实践时间更长(13.4 ±10.4 年与 5.7 ± 3.6 年, = .003),但其他特征相似,包括年龄(44.4 ± 10.2 岁与 42.6 ± 10.1 岁,p = 0.701)。在逻辑回归中,当包括年龄、性别、种族/民族、提供者角色、服务公共保险的百分比和工作场所位置时,实践年限仍然显著(OR = 1.47,95%CI [1.02,2.13]; = .007)。

结论

在我们的队列中,根据保险推荐技术的提供者偏见很常见,并且随着实践年限的增加而增加。造成这种发现的原因可能有很多,包括医疗保健系统驱动因素,但作为糖尿病技术的把关者,提供者可能会加剧美国儿科 T1D 的不平等。

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