Lin Shen Lamson, Fang Lin
Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences, City University of Hong Kong, China.
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Canada.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2023 Feb 19;78(2):302-318. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbac125.
Despite the predominance of chronic disease clustering, primary care delivery for multimorbid patients tends to be less effective and often uncoordinated. This study aims to quantify racial-nativity inequalities in multimorbidity prevalence ≥3 chronic conditions), access to primary care, and relations to past-year subjective unmet health care needs (SUN) among older Canadians.
Population-based data were drawn from the Canadian Community Health Survey (2015-2018). Multivariable logistic regression was performed to estimate the likelihood of multimorbidity, sites of usual source of primary care (USOC), primary care coordination, and multidimensional aspects of SUN. The Classification and Regression Tree (CART) was applied to identify intersecting determinants of SUN.
The overall sample (n = 19,020) were predominantly (69.4%) Canadian-born (CB) Whites (1% CB non-Whites, 18.1% White immigrants, and 11.5% racialized immigrants). Compared with CB Whites, racialized immigrants were more likely to have multimorbidity (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.35, 99% confidence interval [CI]: 1.13-1.61), lack a USOC (AOR = 1.41, 99% CI: 1.07-1.84), and report higher SUN (AOR = 1.47, 99% CI: 1.02-2.11). Racialized immigrants' greater SUN was driven by heightened affordability barriers (AOR = 4.31, 99% CI: 2.02-9.16), acceptability barriers (AOR = 3.11, 99% CI: 1.90-5.10), and unmet needs for chronic care (AOR = 2.71, 99% CI: 1.53-4.80) than CB Whites. The CART analysis found that the racial-nativity gap in SUN perception was still evident even among those who had access to nonpoorly coordinated care.
To achieve an equitable chronic care system, efforts need to tackle affordability barriers, improve service acceptability, minimize service fragmentation, and reallocate treatment resources to underserved older racialized immigrants in Canada.
尽管慢性病聚集现象普遍存在,但为患有多种疾病的患者提供的初级保健往往效果较差且缺乏协调性。本研究旨在量化加拿大老年人在患有多种疾病(≥3种慢性病)、获得初级保健服务以及与过去一年主观未满足的医疗保健需求(SUN)之间的种族 - 出生地不平等情况。
基于人群的数据来自加拿大社区健康调查(2015 - 2018年)。进行多变量逻辑回归以估计患有多种疾病的可能性、初级保健常规来源地点(USOC)、初级保健协调性以及SUN的多维度情况。应用分类与回归树(CART)来识别SUN的交叉决定因素。
总体样本(n = 19,020)主要是(69.4%)在加拿大出生(CB)的白人(1%为CB非白人,18.1%为白人移民,11.5%为少数族裔移民)。与CB白人相比,少数族裔移民更有可能患有多种疾病(调整后的优势比[AOR] = 1.35,99%置信区间[CI]:1.13 - 1.61),没有USOC(AOR = 1.41,99% CI:1.07 - 1.84),并且报告的SUN更高(AOR = 1.47,99% CI:1.02 - 2.11)。少数族裔移民更高的SUN是由比CB白人更高的可负担性障碍(AOR = 4.31,99% CI:2.02 - 9.16)、可接受性障碍(AOR = 3.11,99% CI:1.90 - 5.10)以及慢性护理未满足需求(AOR = 2.71,99% CI:1.53 - 4.80)所驱动的。CART分析发现,即使在那些能够获得协调良好的护理的人群中,SUN认知方面的种族 - 出生地差距仍然明显。
为了实现公平的慢性护理系统,需要努力解决可负担性障碍,提高服务可接受性,尽量减少服务分散,并将治疗资源重新分配给加拿大服务不足的老年少数族裔移民。