Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
School of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
J Prim Care Community Health. 2024 Jan-Dec;15:21501319241290887. doi: 10.1177/21501319241290887.
People experiencing health-related social needs (HRSNs), such as transportation insecurity, are less likely to undergo preventive health screenings. They are more likely to have worse health outcomes overall, including a higher rate of late-stage cancer diagnoses. If primary care clinicians are aware of HRSNs, they can tailor preventive care, including cancer screening approaches. Accordingly, recent guidelines recommend that clinicians "adjust" care based on HRSNs. This study assessed the level of clinician awareness of patient-reported HRSNs and congruence between clinician perception and patient-reported HRSNs.
We surveyed patients aged 50 to 85 years and their clinicians in 3 primary care clinics that routinely screen patients for HRSNs. Patients and clinicians reported the presence/absence of 6 HRSNs, including food, transportation, housing and financial insecurity for medications/healthcare, financial insecurity for utilities, and social isolation. Kappa statistics assessed the concordance of reported HRSNs between patients and clinicians.
Across 237 paired patient-clinician surveys, mean patient age was 65 years, and 62% and 13% of patients were female and Latinx/Hispanic, respectively. Concordance between clinician- and patient-reported HRSNs varied by HRSN, with the lowest agreement for food insecurity (kappa = .08; 95% CI: 0.00, 0.17; = .01) and highest agreement for transportation insecurity (kappa = .39; 95% CI: 0.18, 0.59; < .001). The other HRSNs assessed were housing insecurity (kappa = .30; 95% CI: 0.05, 0.55; < .001), social isolation (kappa = .24; 95% CI: 0.03, 0.45; < .001), financial insecurity for utilities (kappa = .21; 95% CI: -0.02, 0.45; < .001), and financial insecurity for healthcare/medications (kappa = .12; 95% CI: -0.02, 0.27; < .001). In particular, discrepancies were noted in food insecurity prevalence: patient-reported food insecurity was 29% whereas clinician-reported food insecurity was only 3%.
Clinician awareness of patients' social needs was only modest to fair, and varied by specific HRSN. In order to adjust care for HRSNs, clinics need processes for increased sharing of patient-reported HRSNs screening information with the entire clinical team. Future research should explore options for sharing HRSN data across teams and evaluate whether better HRSN data-sharing impacts outcomes.
经历与健康相关的社会需求(HRSN)的人,例如交通不安全,不太可能接受预防性健康筛查。他们总体上更有可能出现更差的健康结果,包括更高的晚期癌症诊断率。如果初级保健临床医生了解 HRSN,他们可以调整预防保健,包括癌症筛查方法。因此,最近的指南建议临床医生根据 HRSN“调整”护理。本研究评估了临床医生对患者报告的 HRSN 的认知水平,以及临床医生的认知与患者报告的 HRSN 之间的一致性。
我们调查了 3 家常规筛查 HRSN 的初级保健诊所中 50 至 85 岁的患者及其临床医生。患者和临床医生报告了 6 种 HRSN 的存在/不存在,包括食物、交通、住房和药物/医疗保健的财务不安全、水电费的财务不安全以及社交孤立。Kappa 统计评估了患者和临床医生报告的 HRSN 之间的一致性。
在 237 对患者-临床医生调查中,患者的平均年龄为 65 岁,62%和 13%的患者分别为女性和拉丁裔/西班牙裔。临床医生和患者报告的 HRSN 之间的一致性因 HRSN 而异,食物不安全的一致性最低(kappa=0.08;95%CI:0.00,0.17;=0.01),交通不安全的一致性最高(kappa=0.39;95%CI:0.18,0.59;<0.001)。评估的其他 HRSN 包括住房不安全(kappa=0.30;95%CI:0.05,0.55;<0.001)、社交孤立(kappa=0.24;95%CI:0.03,0.45;<0.001)、水电费财务不安全(kappa=0.21;95%CI:-0.02,0.45;<0.001)和医疗保健/药物财务不安全(kappa=0.12;95%CI:-0.02,0.27;<0.001)。特别是,食物不安全的患病率存在差异:患者报告的食物不安全率为 29%,而临床医生报告的食物不安全率仅为 3%。
临床医生对患者社会需求的认识仅为中等至良好,并且因特定的 HRSN 而异。为了根据 HRSN 调整护理,诊所需要增加与整个临床团队共享患者报告的 HRSN 筛查信息的流程。未来的研究应该探讨在团队之间共享 HRSN 数据的选项,并评估更好的 HRSN 数据共享是否会影响结果。