Division of General Internal Medicine and Primary Care, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Palliat Med. 2022 Nov;25(11):1629-1638. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2021.0541. Epub 2022 May 16.
Patients with limited English proficiency (LEP) experience lower quality end-of-life (EOL) care. This inequity may have been exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic. Compare health care utilization, EOL, and palliative care outcomes between COVID-19 decedents with and without LEP during the pandemic's first wave in Massachusetts. Retrospective cohort study of adult inpatients who died from COVID-19 between February 18, 2020 and May 18, 2020 at two academic and four community hospitals within a greater Boston health care system. We performed multivariable regression adjusting for patient sociodemographic variables and hospital characteristics. Primary outcome was place of death (intensive care unit [ICU] vs. non-ICU). Secondary outcomes included hospital and ICU length of stay and time to initial palliative care consultation. Among 337 patients, 89 (26.4%) had LEP and 248 (73.6%) were English proficient. Patients with LEP were less often white (24 [27.0%] vs. 193 [77.8%]; < 0.001); were more often Hispanic or Latinx (40 [45.0%] vs. 13 [5.2%]; < 0.001); and less often had a medical order for life-sustaining treatment (MOLST) on admission (15 [16.9%] vs. 120 [48.4%]; < 0.001) versus patients with English proficiency. In the multivariable analyses, LEP was not independently associated with ICU death, ICU length of stay, or time to palliative care consultation, but was independently associated with increased hospital length of stay (mean difference 4.12 days; 95% CI, 1.72-6.53; < 0.001). Inpatient COVID-19 decedents with LEP were not at increased risk of an ICU death, but were associated with an increased hospital length of stay versus inpatient COVID-19 decedents with English proficiency.
患有有限英语水平(LEP)的患者在临终关怀(EOL)方面的体验较差。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,这种不公平现象可能更加严重。在马萨诸塞州 COVID-19 大流行的第一波期间,比较患有和不患有 LEP 的 COVID-19 死亡患者的医疗保健利用、EOL 和姑息治疗结局。对 2020 年 2 月 18 日至 2020 年 5 月 18 日期间在波士顿地区一个更大的医疗保健系统内的两家学术医院和四家社区医院内死于 COVID-19 的成年住院患者进行的回顾性队列研究。我们进行了多变量回归分析,调整了患者的社会人口统计学变量和医院特征。主要结局是死亡地点(重症监护病房[ICU]与非 ICU)。次要结局包括住院时间和 ICU 时间以及初始姑息治疗咨询时间。在 337 名患者中,89 名(26.4%)有 LEP,248 名(73.6%)英语熟练。患有 LEP 的患者中,白人患者较少(24 名[27.0%]与 193 名[77.8%];<0.001);西班牙裔或拉丁裔患者较多(40 名[45.0%]与 13 名[5.2%];<0.001);入院时更少有生命维持治疗(MOLST)医嘱(15 名[16.9%]与 120 名[48.4%];<0.001)。在多变量分析中,LEP 与 ICU 死亡、ICU 住院时间或姑息治疗咨询时间无独立相关性,但与住院时间延长独立相关(平均差异 4.12 天;95%CI,1.72-6.53;<0.001)。患有 LEP 的住院 COVID-19 死亡患者的 ICU 死亡率并未增加,但与具有英语水平的住院 COVID-19 死亡患者相比,住院时间延长。