Department of Internal Medicine, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States.
Vaccine. 2022 Nov 2;40(46):6607-6615. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.08.066. Epub 2022 Oct 5.
Cultural minority groups in the United States have lower vaccination rates or worse influenza-related outcomes. Culturally competent care, which aims to engage the social, cultural, and linguistic needs of all patients, may address some of these disparities.
We investigate how self-reported measures of culturally competent care is associated with influenza vaccination rates in the United States.
The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) 2017 was queried for respondents asked a set of questions which assessed respondents' access to culturally competent care in the past year. The outcome of interest was self-reported receipt of the annual influenza vaccine. Sample-weighted multivariable logistic regressions estimated the adjusted odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals (95 %CI) of influenza vaccination with response to the cultural competency survey questions as the dependent variable of interest. Subsequent marginal modeling predicted the adjusted vaccination rates among cultural minorities (racial/ethnic minorities, LGBTQ + adults, foreign-born individuals, and non-English speakers) and respondents with high-risk comorbidities for worse influenza outcomes. Models were adjusted for other known determinants of vaccination coverage.
20,303 sample adults were included in the analyses. There were significantly higher odds of influenza vaccination among respondents who were "always" or "most of the time" treated with respect by their providers (aOR 1.53, 95 %CI [1.23-1.90], P < 0.001), given easy-to-understand information (aOR 1.37, 95 %CI [1.19-1.58], P < 0.001), asked about their opinions or beliefs about their care (aOR 1.29, 95 %CI [1.19-1.39], P < 0.001), and seen by providers who shared or understood their culture (aOR 1.15 95 %CI [1.01-1.30], P = 0.03), compared to their counterparts who responded with "some" or "none of the time" to the same survey questions. Higher adjusted influenza vaccination rates were seen among multiple racial/ethnic groups, LGBTQ + adults, foreign-born individuals, non-English speakers, and individuals with high-risk comorbidities who reported positive responses to the cultural competency survey questions.
We demonstrate a positive association between self-reported frequency of access to culturally competent care and receipt of the annual influenza vaccine. These findings support future efforts to evaluate vaccination outcomes among patients who receive components of culturally competent care, such as linguistically appropriate services, race-concordant healthcare workforce, and community engagement.
美国的少数民族群体疫苗接种率较低,或流感相关结局较差。文化能力护理旨在满足所有患者的社会、文化和语言需求,可能会解决其中的一些差异。
我们研究自我报告的文化能力护理措施与美国流感疫苗接种率之间的关系。
对 2017 年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)进行了查询,询问了一组问题,这些问题评估了受访者在过去一年中获得文化能力护理的情况。感兴趣的结果是自我报告接种了年度流感疫苗。采用样本加权多变量逻辑回归估计了对文化能力调查问题的回答作为感兴趣的因变量与流感疫苗接种的调整后优势比(OR)和 95%置信区间(95%CI)。随后的边缘建模预测了文化少数群体(种族/族裔少数群体、LGBTQ+成年人、外国出生者和非英语使用者)和有发生严重流感结局高风险合并症的受访者中的调整后疫苗接种率。模型调整了其他已知的疫苗接种覆盖率决定因素。
共纳入 20303 名成年样本。与回答“始终”或“大部分时间”得到提供者尊重的受访者相比(调整后 OR 1.53,95%CI [1.23-1.90],P<0.001)、获得易于理解信息的受访者(调整后 OR 1.37,95%CI [1.19-1.58],P<0.001)、被问及对自己护理的意见或信念的受访者(调整后 OR 1.29,95%CI [1.19-1.39],P<0.001)和接受与自己文化共享或理解自己文化的提供者治疗的受访者(调整后 OR 1.15,95%CI [1.01-1.30],P=0.03),流感疫苗接种的几率更高。与对同一调查问题回答“有时”或“从不”的受访者相比,多个种族/族裔群体、LGBTQ+成年人、外国出生者、非英语使用者以及报告对文化能力调查问题回答积极的高风险合并症患者,调整后的流感疫苗接种率更高。
我们证明了自我报告获得文化能力护理的频率与接种年度流感疫苗之间存在正相关关系。这些发现支持未来评估接受文化能力护理(如语言适宜服务、种族一致的医疗保健劳动力和社区参与)的患者的疫苗接种结果的努力。