Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Division of Public Health Sciences, Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2022 Feb 1;480(2):325-339. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002044.
Social deprivation negatively affects a myriad of physical and behavioral health outcomes. Several measures of social deprivation exist, but it is unclear which measure is best suited to describe patients with orthopaedic conditions.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Which measure of social deprivation, defined as "limited access to society's resources due to poverty, discrimination, or other disadvantage," is most strongly and consistently correlated with patient-reported physical and behavioral health in patients with orthopaedic conditions? (2) Compared with the use of a single measure alone, how much more variability in patient-reported health does the simultaneous use of multiple social deprivation measures capture?
Between 2015 and 2017, a total of 79,818 new patient evaluations occurred within the orthopaedic department of a single, large, urban, tertiary-care academic center. Over that period, standardized collection of patient-reported health measures (as described by the Patient-reported Outcomes Measurement Information System [PROMIS]) was implemented in a staged fashion throughout the department. We excluded the 25% (19,926) of patient encounters that did not have associated PROMIS measures reported, which left 75% (59,892) of patient encounters available for analysis in this cross-sectional study of existing medical records. Five markers of social deprivation were collected for each patient: national and state Area Deprivation Index, Medically Underserved Area Status, Rural-Urban Commuting Area code, and insurance classification (private, Medicare, Medicaid, or other). Patient-reported physical and behavioral health was measured via PROMIS computer adaptive test domains, which patients completed as part of standard care before being evaluated by a provider. Adults completed the PROMIS Physical Function version 1.2 or version 2.0, Pain Interference version 1.1, Anxiety version 1.0, and Depression version 1.0. Children ages 5 to 17 years completed the PROMIS Pediatric Mobility version 1.0 or version 2.0, Pain Interference version 1.0 or version 2.0, Upper Extremity version 1.0, and Peer Relationships version 1.0. Age-adjusted partial Pearson correlation coefficients were determined for each social deprivation measure and PROMIS domain. Coefficients of at least 0.1 were considered clinically meaningful for this purpose. Additionally, to determine the percentage of PROMIS score variability that could be attributed to each social deprivation measure, an age-adjusted hierarchical regression analysis was performed for each PROMIS domain, in which social deprivation measures were sequentially added as independent variables. The model coefficients of determination (r2) were compared as social deprivation measures were incrementally added. Improvement of the r2 by at least 10% was considered clinically meaningful.
Insurance classification was the social deprivation measure with the largest (absolute value) age-adjusted correlation coefficient for all adult and pediatric PROMIS physical and behavioral health domains (adults: correlation coefficient 0.40 to 0.43 [95% CI 0.39 to 0.44]; pediatrics: correlation coefficient 0.10 to 0.19 [95% CI 0.08 to 0.21]), followed by national Area Deprivation Index (adults: correlation coefficient 0.18 to 0.22 [95% CI 0.17 to 0.23]; pediatrics: correlation coefficient 0.08 to 0.15 [95% CI 0.06 to 0.17]), followed closely by state Area Deprivation Index. The Medically Underserved Area Status and Rural-Urban Commuting Area code each had correlation coefficients of 0.1 or larger for some PROMIS domains but neither had consistently stronger correlation coefficients than the other. Except for the PROMIS Pediatric Upper Extremity domain, consideration of insurance classification and the national Area Deprivation Index together explained more of the variation in age-adjusted PROMIS scores than the use of insurance classification alone (adults: r2 improvement 32% to 189% [95% CI 0.02 to 0.04]; pediatrics: r2 improvement 56% to 110% [95% CI 0.01 to 0.02]). The addition of the Medically Underserved Area Status, Rural-Urban Commuting Area code, and/or state Area Deprivation Index did not further improve the r2 for any of the PROMIS domains.
To capture the most variability due to social deprivation in orthopaedic patients' self-reported physical and behavioral health, insurance classification (categorized as private, Medicare, Medicaid, or other) and national Area Deprivation Index should be included in statistical analyses. If only one measure of social deprivation is preferred, insurance classification or national Area Deprivation Index are reasonable options. Insurance classification may be more readily available, but the national Area Deprivation Index stratifies patients across a wider distribution of values. When conducting clinical outcomes research with social deprivation as a relevant covariate, we encourage researchers to consider accounting for insurance classification and/or national Area Deprivation Index, both of which are freely available and can be obtained from data that are typically collected during routine clinical care.
Level III, therapeutic study.
社会剥夺对身体和行为健康的诸多方面都有负面影响。有几种社会剥夺的衡量标准,但尚不清楚哪种标准最适合描述患有骨科疾病的患者。
问题/目的:(1)“由于贫困、歧视或其他劣势而导致对社会资源的获取有限”定义的社会剥夺的哪种衡量标准与骨科患者的患者报告的身体和行为健康最强烈和最一致相关?(2)与单独使用单一措施相比,同时使用多个社会剥夺措施可以捕捉到患者报告的健康状况的差异有多大?
在 2015 年至 2017 年间,在一家大型城市三级学术中心的骨科部门共发生了 79818 例新患者评估。在此期间,通过分阶段在整个部门实施标准化的患者报告健康措施(如患者报告结果测量信息系统[PROMIS]所描述的)。我们排除了 25%(19926 例)没有相关 PROMIS 测量报告的患者就诊记录,因此在本项对现有医疗记录的横断面研究中,有 75%(59892 例)的患者就诊记录可供分析。为每位患者收集了 5 个社会剥夺指标:国家和州的区域剥夺指数、医疗服务不足地区状况、城乡通勤区代码和保险分类(私人、医疗保险、医疗补助或其他)。患者报告的身体和行为健康通过 PROMIS 计算机自适应测试领域进行测量,患者在接受提供者评估前作为标准护理的一部分完成这些测试。成年人完成了 PROMIS 身体功能版本 1.2 或版本 2.0、疼痛干扰版本 1.1、焦虑版本 1.0 和抑郁版本 1.0。年龄在 5 至 17 岁之间的儿童完成了 PROMIS 儿科移动版本 1.0 或版本 2.0、疼痛干扰版本 1.0 或版本 2.0、上肢版本 1.0 和同伴关系版本 1.0。为每个社会剥夺指标和 PROMIS 领域确定了年龄调整后的部分 Pearson 相关系数。对于此目的,系数至少为 0.1 被认为具有临床意义。此外,为了确定每个社会剥夺指标可以归因于 PROMIS 评分变化的百分比,针对每个 PROMIS 领域进行了年龄调整的层次回归分析,其中社会剥夺指标作为自变量依次添加。比较模型决定系数(r2),随着社会剥夺指标的逐步增加。r2 提高至少 10%被认为具有临床意义。
在所有成年和儿科 PROMIS 身体和行为健康领域中,保险分类是与所有成年和儿科 PROMIS 身体和行为健康领域具有最大(绝对值)年龄调整相关性系数的社会剥夺指标(成年人:相关系数 0.40 至 0.43[95%CI 0.39 至 0.44];儿科:相关系数 0.10 至 0.19[95%CI 0.08 至 0.21]),其次是国家区域剥夺指数(成年人:相关系数 0.18 至 0.22[95%CI 0.17 至 0.23];儿科:相关系数 0.08 至 0.15[95%CI 0.06 至 0.17]),其次是州区域剥夺指数。对于一些 PROMIS 领域,医疗服务不足地区状况和城乡通勤区代码的相关系数为 0.1 或更大,但它们都没有比其他指标具有更强的相关性系数。除了 PROMIS 儿科上肢领域外,考虑保险分类和国家区域剥夺指数共同解释了年龄调整后 PROMIS 评分变化的比例大于仅使用保险分类(成年人:r2 提高 32%至 189%[95%CI 0.02 至 0.04];儿科:r2 提高 56%至 110%[95%CI 0.01 至 0.02])。添加医疗服务不足地区状况、城乡通勤区代码和/或州区域剥夺指数并没有进一步提高任何 PROMIS 领域的 r2。
为了在骨科患者自我报告的身体和行为健康中捕捉到最大的社会剥夺差异,应在统计分析中包含保险分类(分为私人、医疗保险、医疗补助或其他)和国家区域剥夺指数。如果只选择一种社会剥夺的衡量标准,保险分类或国家区域剥夺指数是合理的选择。保险分类可能更容易获得,但国家区域剥夺指数将患者分层在更广泛的分布值中。当将社会剥夺作为相关协变量进行临床结果研究时,我们鼓励研究人员考虑考虑使用保险分类和/或国家区域剥夺指数,这两个指标都是免费的,可以从通常在常规临床护理中收集的数据中获得。
III 级,治疗性研究。