Decker Hannah, Raguram Mukund, Kanzaria Hemal K, Duke Michael, Wick Elizabeth
Department of Surgery, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
School of Medicine, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Surgery. 2024 Apr;175(4):1095-1102. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2023.11.009. Epub 2023 Dec 22.
Unhoused patients have worse surgical outcomes than the general population. However, the drivers of this inequity have not been studied.
We conducted 26 semi-structured interviews of clinicians who care for patients with surgical disease, using a purposive sampling strategy to intentionally recruit participants with significant experience caring for unhoused patients across different roles. We used thematic analysis to analyze the resulting data.
We conducted 26 interviews: 11 with surgeons (42%), 8 with internal medicine physicians (30%), 2 with surgical advanced practice providers (8%), 3 with social workers or case managers (11%), and 2 with registered nurses (8%). One-third of the participants worked in either medical respite or street medicine programs. We identified 5 themes, each of which was most relevant at a distinct point along the spectrum of surgical care: (1) patients and clinicians face multiple challenges meeting preoperative requirements, (2) although surgeons do not make major operative decisions based on housing status, some take it into consideration for minor care decisions, (3) clinicians perceive that unhoused patients have negative postoperative experiences in the hospital, (4) discharge options for unhoused patients are commonly imperfect, which can lead to inadequate postoperative care, (5) challenges with formal communication between surgeons and non-surgeons are amplified when caring for unhoused patients.
Clinicians who care for unhoused patients with surgical disease relayed multiple challenges throughout all phases of surgical care and relied on both formal and informal mechanisms to mitigate these challenges. There may be opportunities to intervene and improve access to surgical care for this vulnerable group.
无家可归患者的手术结局比普通人群更差。然而,这种不平等的驱动因素尚未得到研究。
我们对治疗外科疾病患者的临床医生进行了26次半结构化访谈,采用目的抽样策略,有意招募在不同角色中照顾无家可归患者方面具有丰富经验的参与者。我们使用主题分析来分析所得数据。
我们进行了26次访谈:11次访谈外科医生(42%),8次访谈内科医生(30%),2次访谈外科高级执业提供者(8%),3次访谈社会工作者或病例管理员(11%),2次访谈注册护士(8%)。三分之一的参与者在医疗暂托或街头医疗项目中工作。我们确定了5个主题,每个主题在外科护理过程的不同阶段最为相关:(1)患者和临床医生在满足术前要求方面面临多重挑战,(2)尽管外科医生不会基于住房状况做出重大手术决策,但有些医生在做出小的护理决策时会考虑这一因素,(3)临床医生认为无家可归患者在医院有负面的术后体验,(4)无家可归患者的出院选择通常不完善,这可能导致术后护理不足,(5)在照顾无家可归患者时,外科医生和非外科医生之间正式沟通的挑战会加剧。
照顾患有外科疾病的无家可归患者的临床医生在外科护理的各个阶段都反映了多重挑战,并依靠正式和非正式机制来缓解这些挑战。对于这一弱势群体,可能有机会进行干预并改善其获得外科护理的机会。