Hernández-Agosto Jonathan, Santiago-Quiñones Darlene I, García-Carmona Lucía M, Gutiérrez-Sacristán Alba
School of Pharmacy, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
School of Pharmacy, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2024 Aug 1;261:111357. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111357. Epub 2024 Jun 14.
The global longevity revolution increased the older adult population, posing unique health and economic challenges with implications for healthcare, especially substance use disorders (SUD).
This was a retrospective cohort study of United States older adults, Hispanic and non-Hispanic, who got at least one mental and/or behavioral disorder diagnosis between 2017 and 2021 at age 65 or older. SUD prevalence, prescription frequency changes over time, and comorbidities associated with each medication were compared.
Electronic health records for 356,133 older adults (110,236 Hispanics and 245,897 non-Hispanics) were analyzed. Notably, 79 % of Hispanics fell below the 100 % federal poverty level, compared to 60 % of non-Hispanics (P<.001). Non-Hispanics also had significantly more average encounters (P=.003) and diagnoses (P<.001). Regression analysis on alcohol-related disorders indicated that the odd ratios of being male (OR=2.93, P<.000), and having low income (OR=1.62, P<.000), increase the odds for this SUD, while being Hispanic and primarily speaking Spanish decreases the odds for all SUDs considered in this study.
This cohort study revealed significant disparities related to social determinants of health between Hispanic and non-Hispanic older adults and emphasizes the need for continuous surveillance of older adults as with SUDs. Differences in comorbidity patterns imply distinct risk factors within each population, influenced by demographic-specific elements. Recognizing these variations is essential for tailoring culturally sensitive prevention, intervention, and treatment strategies to each population's unique needs.
全球长寿革命使老年人口增加,给医疗保健带来了独特的健康和经济挑战,尤其是对物质使用障碍(SUD)而言。
这是一项针对美国65岁及以上的西班牙裔和非西班牙裔老年人的回顾性队列研究,这些老年人在2017年至2021年间至少有一次精神和/或行为障碍诊断。比较了物质使用障碍的患病率、随时间变化的处方频率以及每种药物相关的合并症。
分析了356133名老年人(110236名西班牙裔和245897名非西班牙裔)的电子健康记录。值得注意的是,79%的西班牙裔人口低于联邦贫困线的100%,而非西班牙裔为60%(P<0.001)。非西班牙裔的平均就诊次数(P=0.003)和诊断次数也明显更多(P<0.001)。对酒精相关障碍的回归分析表明,男性(比值比=2.93,P<0.000)和低收入(比值比=1.62,P<0.000)会增加患这种物质使用障碍的几率,而西班牙裔且主要说西班牙语会降低本研究中所有物质使用障碍的几率。
这项队列研究揭示了西班牙裔和非西班牙裔老年人在健康社会决定因素方面的显著差异,并强调了对老年人与物质使用障碍一样进行持续监测的必要性。合并症模式的差异意味着每个群体中存在不同的风险因素,这些因素受特定人口特征的影响。认识到这些差异对于根据每个群体的独特需求制定具有文化敏感性的预防、干预和治疗策略至关重要。