Department of Statistics, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
Te Kupenga Hauora Māori, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMJ Open. 2023 Jul 30;13(7):e066876. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066876.
In Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ), socioeconomic status and being of Māori ethnicity are often associated with poorer health outcomes, including after surgery. Inequities can be partially explained by differences in health status and health system biases are hypothesised as important factors for remaining inequities. Previous work identified inequities between Māori and non-Māori following cardiovascular surgery, some of which have been identified in studies between 1990 and 2012. Days Alive and Out of Hospital (DAOH) is an emerging surgical outcome metric. DAOH is a composite measure of outcomes, which may reflect patient experience and longer periods of DAOH may also reflect extended interactions with the health system. Recently, a 1.1-day difference in DAOH was observed between Māori and non-Māori at a hospital in NZ across a range of operations.
We will conduct a secondary data analysis using data from the National Minimum Data Set, maintained by the Ministry of Health. We will report unadjusted and risk-adjusted DAOH values between Māori and non-Māori using direct risk standardisation. We will risk adjust first for age and sex, then for each of deprivation (NZDep18), levels of morbidity (M3 score) and rurality. We will report DAOH values across three time periods, 30, 90 and 365 days and across nine deciles of the DAOH distribution (0.1-0.9 inclusive). We will interpret all results from a Kaupapa Māori research positioning, acknowledging that Māori health outcomes are directly tied to the unequal distribution of the social determinants of health.
Ethics approval for this study was given by the Auckland Health Research Ethics Committee. Outputs from this study are likely to interest a range of audiences. We plan to disseminate our findings through academic channels, presentations to interested groups including Māori-specific hui (meetings), social media and lay press.
在新西兰(NZ),社会经济地位和毛利人种族往往与较差的健康结果相关,包括手术后。健康状况的差异可以部分解释不平等现象,而健康系统的偏见被假设为造成剩余不平等现象的重要因素。先前的工作确定了毛利人和非毛利人在心血管手术后的不平等现象,其中一些在 1990 年至 2012 年的研究中已经确定。存活且出院天数(DAOH)是一种新兴的手术结果指标。DAOH 是一个综合的结果衡量标准,可能反映了患者的体验,更长的 DAOH 时间也可能反映了与医疗系统的更长时间的互动。最近,在 NZ 的一家医院,观察到毛利人和非毛利人在一系列手术中的 DAOH 存在 1.1 天的差异。
我们将使用卫生部维护的国家最低数据集进行二次数据分析。我们将使用直接风险标准化报告毛利人和非毛利人之间未调整和风险调整后的 DAOH 值。我们将首先根据年龄和性别进行风险调整,然后根据贫困程度(NZDep18)、发病率水平(M3 评分)和农村程度进行风险调整。我们将报告 30、90 和 365 天的 DAOH 值,以及 DAOH 分布的九个十分位数(0.1-0.9 包括在内)。我们将从毛利研究定位的角度解释所有结果,承认毛利人的健康结果与健康的社会决定因素的不平等分配直接相关。
这项研究的伦理批准由奥克兰健康研究伦理委员会授予。这项研究的结果可能会引起不同受众的兴趣。我们计划通过学术渠道、向感兴趣的团体(包括毛利人特定的 Hui(会议))、社交媒体和大众媒体宣传我们的发现。