Schaeffer Sienna E, Gonzalez Bravo Carolina, Ahlers Christopher D, Elliott-Wherry Alaina N, Zadeh Hannah, de-Winton Cummings Precious-Junia, Dukes Kimberly C, Ibrahim Nasrien E, Jones DeShauna, Zamba Patrick T, Wilks Aloha D, Carvour Martha L
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Department of Community and Behavioral Health, University of Iowa College of Public Health, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Health Equity. 2025 Mar 11;9(1):161-169. doi: 10.1089/heq.2024.0170. eCollection 2025.
Minoritized racial and ethnic groups in the United States face long-standing disparities in a variety of health outcomes, owing to inequitable distribution of social and structural determinants of health along racial and ethnic lines. Although the existence of such disparities has long been a topic of scientific inquiry, there has been a dearth of investigations regarding their underlying mechanisms and potential remedies. This presents a challenge to those creating evidence-based and equity-focused health policy.
We conducted an evidence-based, equity-focused narrative review about living kidney donor eligibility using salient literature about donor eligibility and racial and ethnic disparities in kidney transplantation and donation in the United States. We sought to examine the rigor and reproducibility of the evidence base regarding race- and ethnicity-based living kidney donation policies.
Our review identified several threats to scientific validity in the evidence base, including ambiguity in the operationalization of race and ethnicity variables, instances of type III error and racial essentialist biases, and causal inferences made using underpowered or scientifically unsubstantial subgroup analyses. We also identified structural barriers to the interpretation of this evidence to advance health equity, including barriers to the practices of clinical equipoise and shared medical decision-making.
Threats to scientific validity and inferential errors in the evidence base about health inequities may forestall progress toward equity. We provide recommendations for addressing such barriers using standards applied in other clinical and research domains.
由于社会和健康结构决定因素在种族和族裔间分布不均,美国少数族裔在各种健康结果方面长期面临差异。尽管这种差异的存在长期以来一直是科学探究的主题,但对于其潜在机制和可能的补救措施的研究却很匮乏。这给制定基于证据且关注公平的卫生政策的人带来了挑战。
我们利用有关美国肾脏移植和捐赠中捐赠者资格及种族和族裔差异的重要文献,对活体肾脏捐赠者资格进行了基于证据且关注公平的叙述性综述。我们试图检验基于种族和族裔的活体肾脏捐赠政策证据基础的严谨性和可重复性。
我们的综述确定了证据基础中对科学有效性的若干威胁,包括种族和族裔变量操作化的模糊性、III类错误和种族本质主义偏见的实例,以及使用效力不足或科学依据不充分的亚组分析进行的因果推断。我们还确定了将这些证据用于促进健康公平的结构性障碍,包括临床 equipoise 实践和共同医疗决策方面的障碍。
关于健康不平等的证据基础中对科学有效性的威胁和推断错误可能会阻碍公平方面的进展。我们使用其他临床和研究领域应用的标准,为解决此类障碍提供了建议。