Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Liver Transpl. 2023 Nov 1;29(11):1161-1171. doi: 10.1097/LVT.0000000000000127. Epub 2023 Mar 20.
Disparities exist in referral and access to the liver transplant (LT) waitlist, and social determinants of health (SDOH) are increasingly recognized as important factors driving health inequities, including in LT. The SDOH of potential transplant candidates is therefore important to characterize when designing targeted interventions to promote equity in access to LT. Yet, it is uncertain how a transplant center should approach this issue, characterize SDOH, identify disparities, and use these data to inform interventions. We performed a retrospective study of referrals for first-time, single-organ LT to our center from 2016 to 2020. Addresses were geoprocessed and mapped to the corresponding county, census tract, and census block group to assess their geospatial distribution, identify potential disparities in referrals, and characterize their communities across multiple domains of SDOH to identify potential barriers to evaluation and selection. We identified variability in referral patterns and areas with disproportionately low referrals, including counties in the highest quartile of liver disease mortality (9%) and neighborhoods in the highest quintile of socioeconomic deprivation (17%) and quartile of poverty (21%). Black individuals were also under-represented compared with expected state demographics (12% vs. 18%). Among the referral population, several potential barriers to evaluation and selection for LT were identified, including poverty, educational attainment, access to healthy food, and access to technology. This approach to the characterization of a transplant center's referral population by geographic location and associated SDOH demonstrates a model for identifying disparities in a referral population and potential barriers to evaluation that can be used to inform targeted interventions for disparities in LT access.
在获得肝移植 (LT) 候补名单的机会方面存在差异,健康的社会决定因素 (SDOH) 越来越被认为是导致健康不平等的重要因素,包括 LT。因此,在设计促进 LT 获得公平的针对性干预措施时,了解潜在移植候选人的 SDOH 非常重要。然而,移植中心应该如何处理这个问题,如何描述 SDOH、确定差异以及利用这些数据为干预措施提供信息,这一点尚不确定。我们对 2016 年至 2020 年期间我们中心首次进行的单器官 LT 转诊进行了回顾性研究。对地址进行了地理处理,并映射到相应的县、普查区和普查街区组,以评估其地理位置分布,确定转诊中的潜在差异,并对其所在的多个 SDOH 领域的社区进行特征描述,以确定评估和选择的潜在障碍。我们发现转诊模式存在差异,某些地区的转诊率过低,包括肝脏疾病死亡率最高的四分位数 (9%) 的县和社会经济剥夺程度最高的五分位数 (17%) 和贫困程度最高的四分位数 (21%) 的社区。与预期的州人口统计学相比,黑人也明显代表性不足 (12% 与 18%)。在转诊人群中,确定了 LT 评估和选择的几个潜在障碍,包括贫困、教育程度、获得健康食品的机会和获得技术的机会。这种通过地理位置和相关 SDOH 对移植中心转诊人群进行特征描述的方法为确定转诊人群中的差异和评估潜在障碍提供了一个模型,可用于为 LT 获得公平性的差异提供针对性干预措施。