Department of Speech Language & Hearing Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States of America.
Department of Health Systems, Management & Policy, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Sep 27;19(9):e0308963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308963. eCollection 2024.
Longstanding racial disparities in stroke-related outcomes have been well documented. However, the underlying causes of observed disparities have neither been clearly determined nor have strategies to mitigate disparities been developed. Evidence suggests that racial disparities may be partially explained by structural barriers that can arise from implicit and explicit provider biases, institutional practices, public policies, or characteristics of the community where patients reside and recover from their conditions. The objective of this study is to move beyond traditional measures of disparities by identifying the mechanisms that drive these observed disparities in aphasia and dysphagia across the continuum of care. In this study we will follow stroke survivors for 12 months post-discharge, which will allow us to examine the patient, provider, health system, and administrative factors that impact their aphasia and dysphagia recovery.
This study will utilize a 100% sample of Medicare fee-for-service claims data for persons hospitalized for stroke. Patients discharged from acute stroke care will be followed for at least 12 months to measure the timing of post-acute care transition(s) and post-acute care speech-language pathology (SLP) utilization. Functional communication and swallowing outcomes will be measured at initiation, conclusion of post-acute care treatment, and points in-between allowing us to link improvement of functional communication (i.e., aphasia) and swallowing ability (i.e., dysphagia) to aphasia/dysphagia treatments as patients transition through post-acute settings. Then, using regression decomposition methods, we will examine the relationships between race and: (a) where patients receive treatment, (b) the timing of transition between sites of care, and (c) the quality of care received. Decomposition methods will allow us to elucidate the multiple factors that contribute to underlying observed health disparities by quantifying the extent to which differences between the outcomes of two groups are explained by 1) differential endowments or characteristics, such as geographic access, education, risk factors, or insurance coverage; or 2) differences in decision-making, defined as between group differences in outcomes despite equal endowments or unmeasured differences.
We hypothesize that racial disparities in aphasia and dysphagia outcomes will not only result from differences in the quantity and timing of services provided in the post-acute and community settings, but also structural differences at the community level. These findings will provide a more comprehensive understanding of healthcare use and outcomes.
长期以来,中风相关结果的种族差异已得到充分记录。然而,观察到的差异的根本原因尚未明确确定,也没有制定减轻差异的策略。有证据表明,种族差异可能部分归因于结构性障碍,这些障碍可能源于提供者的隐性和显性偏见、机构实践、公共政策或患者居住和康复的社区特征。本研究的目的是通过确定导致整个护理过程中失语症和吞咽障碍观察到的差异的机制,超越传统的差异衡量标准。在这项研究中,我们将在出院后 12 个月内跟踪中风幸存者,这将使我们能够检查影响他们失语症和吞咽障碍恢复的患者、提供者、医疗保健系统和行政因素。
本研究将利用医疗保险按服务收费数据中 100%的样本,对因中风住院的人进行研究。从急性中风护理出院的患者将至少随访 12 个月,以测量急性后护理过渡(和)急性后护理言语病理学(SLP)使用的时间。功能沟通和吞咽结果将在开始时、急性后护理治疗结束时和中间点进行测量,使我们能够将功能沟通(即失语症)和吞咽能力(即吞咽困难)的改善与患者通过急性后环境过渡时接受的失语症/吞咽障碍治疗联系起来。然后,使用回归分解方法,我们将检查种族与以下方面之间的关系:(a)患者接受治疗的地点;(b)护理地点之间过渡的时间;(c)接受的护理质量。分解方法将通过量化两组结果之间的差异在多大程度上由以下因素解释,从而阐明导致观察到的健康差异的多种因素:1)不同的禀赋或特征,如地理可及性、教育、风险因素或保险覆盖范围;或 2)决策差异,即尽管禀赋相等或存在未测量的差异,但组间结果的差异。
我们假设,失语症和吞咽障碍结果的种族差异不仅源于急性后和社区环境中提供服务的数量和时间的差异,还源于社区层面的结构性差异。这些发现将提供对医疗保健使用和结果的更全面理解。