Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine and.
Palliative and Advanced Illness Research Center, Department of Medicine, and.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2024 Nov;21(11):1583-1591. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202404-434OC.
Current critical care practice does not integrate social determinants of health (SDOH) in systematic or standardized ways. Routine assessment of SDOH in the intensive care unit (ICU) may improve clinical decision making, patient- and family-centered outcomes, and clinician well-being. Given that the appropriateness and feasibility of SDOH assessment in the ICU is unknown, we aimed to understand how ICU clinicians think about and use SDOH. We conducted semistructured interviews with clinicians focused on barriers to and facilitators of assessing SDOH during critical illness and perceptions of screening for SDOH in the ICU. We used chart-stimulated recall to assist clinicians in reflecting on how SDOH applied to and was used in patients' care. After deidentifying interviews, we analyzed transcripts guided by a thematic analysis approach using a combination of inductive and deductive coding, the latter framed within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention SDOH Healthy People framework. We completed interviews with 30 clinicians in a variety of professional roles. The majority of clinicians self-identified as men ( = 17; 56.7%) of White race ( = 25; 83.3%). Clinicians contextualize their use of SDOH within three frames of reference: ) their own identity and experiences; ) their relationships and communication with patients and caregivers; and ) immediate structures of care around ICU patients, including clinician advocacy, care transitions, and readmission. Clinicians identified that discussing SDOH could allow them to recognize bias faced by their patients, elucidate drivers of critical illness, and navigate communication with patients' caregivers. Clinicians worried about ICU-specific factors impeding the discussion of SDOH, including time constraints and acuity, high stakes and emotions, and negative anticipatory emotions. Clinicians gather SDOH during critical illness both to understand their patients' stories and to provide individualized care, which may lead to better clinician satisfaction and patient- and family-centered care outcomes. Educational and operational efforts to increase SDOH assessment and use in critical care should also gather and integrate the perspectives of patients and caregivers regarding the collection and use of SDOH in the ICU.
目前,重症监护实践并未以系统或标准化的方式将健康的社会决定因素(social determinants of health,SDOH)纳入其中。在重症监护病房(intensive care unit,ICU)中对 SDOH 进行常规评估可能会改善临床决策、以患者和家庭为中心的结局以及临床医生的幸福感。鉴于 ICU 中 SDOH 评估的适宜性和可行性尚不清楚,我们旨在了解 ICU 临床医生如何看待和使用 SDOH。我们对专注于评估危重病期间 SDOH 的障碍和促进因素以及 ICU 中 SDOH 筛查的看法的临床医生进行了半结构化访谈。我们使用图表刺激回忆来帮助临床医生反思 SDOH 如何应用于患者的护理并在患者的护理中使用。在对访谈进行去识别后,我们根据主题分析方法分析了转录本,该方法结合了归纳和演绎编码,后者框架基于疾病控制和预防中心 SDOH 健康人框架。我们采访了 30 名来自不同专业角色的临床医生。大多数临床医生自认为是男性( = 17;56.7%)和白人( = 25;83.3%)。临床医生将他们对 SDOH 的使用置于三个参考框架内:)他们自己的身份和经验;)他们与患者和照护者的关系和沟通;以及)围绕 ICU 患者的即时护理结构,包括临床医生的倡导、护理过渡和再入院。临床医生认为,讨论 SDOH 可以让他们认识到患者面临的偏见,阐明危重病的驱动因素,并与患者的照护者进行沟通。临床医生担心 ICU 特有的因素会阻碍 SDOH 的讨论,包括时间限制和严重程度、高风险和情绪以及负面预期情绪。临床医生在危重病期间收集 SDOH,既是为了了解患者的故事,也是为了提供个性化的护理,这可能会提高临床医生的满意度并改善以患者和家庭为中心的护理结局。为了提高重症护理中对 SDOH 的评估和使用,还应收集和整合患者和照护者对 ICU 中 SDOH 收集和使用的观点。