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Multicenter study of racial and ethnic inequities in liver transplantation evaluation: Understanding mechanisms and identifying solutions.
Strauss, Alexandra T; Sidoti, Carolyn N; Purnell, Tanjala S; Sung, Hannah C; Jackson, John W; Levin, Scott; Jain, Vedant S; Malinsky, Daniel; Segev, Dorry L; Hamilton, James P; Garonzik-Wang, Jacqueline; Gray, Stephen H; Levan, Macey L; Scalea, Joseph R; Cameron, Andrew M; Gurakar, Ahmet; Gurses, Ayse P.
Affiliation
  • Strauss AT; Department of MedicineSchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Sidoti CN; Malone Center for Engineering in HealthcareWhiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Purnell TS; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Sung HC; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Jackson JW; Department of EpidemiologyBloomberg School of Public, Health Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Levin S; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Jain VS; Department of EpidemiologyBloomberg School of Public, Health Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Malinsky D; Malone Center for Engineering in HealthcareWhiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Segev DL; Department of Emergency MedicineSchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Hamilton JP; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Garonzik-Wang J; Department of BiostatisticsColumbia University Mailman School of Public HealthNew YorkNew YorkUSA.
  • Gray SH; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Levan ML; Department of EpidemiologyBloomberg School of Public, Health Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Scalea JR; Department of MedicineSchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Cameron AM; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, University of WisconsinMadisonWisconsinUSA.
  • Gurakar A; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, University of MarylandBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
  • Gurses AP; Department of SurgerySchool of Medicine, Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimoreMarylandUSA.
Liver Transpl ; 28(12): 1841-1856, 2022 12.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35726679
ABSTRACT
Racial and ethnic disparities persist in access to the liver transplantation (LT) waiting list; however, there is limited knowledge about underlying system-level factors that may be responsible for these disparities. Given the complex nature of LT candidate evaluation, a human factors and systems engineering approach may provide insights. We recruited participants from the LT teams (coordinators, advanced practice providers, physicians, social workers, dieticians, pharmacists, leadership) at two major LT centers. From December 2020 to July 2021, we performed ethnographic observations (participant-patient appointments, committee meetings) and semistructured interviews (N = 54 interviews, 49 observation hours). Based on findings from this multicenter, multimethod qualitative study combined with the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety 2.0 (a human factors and systems engineering model for health care), we created a conceptual framework describing how transplant work system characteristics and other external factors may improve equity in the LT evaluation process. Participant perceptions about listing disparities described external factors (e.g., structural racism, ambiguous national guidelines, national quality metrics) that permeate the LT evaluation process. Mechanisms identified included minimal transplant team diversity, implicit bias, and interpersonal racism. A lack of resources was a common theme, such as social workers, transportation assistance, non-English-language materials, and time (e.g., more time for education for patients with health literacy concerns). Because of the minimal data collection or center feedback about disparities, participants felt uncomfortable with and unadaptable to unwanted outcomes, which perpetuate disparities. We proposed transplant center-level solutions (i.e., including but not limited to training of staff on health equity) to modifiable barriers in the clinical work system that could help patient navigation, reduce disparities, and improve access to care. Our findings call for an urgent need for transplant centers, national societies, and policy makers to focus efforts on improving equity (tailored, patient-centered resources) using the science of human factors and systems engineering.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Liver Transplantation Type of study: Clinical_trials / Guideline / Prognostic_studies / Qualitative_research Aspects: Equity_inequality Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Liver Transpl Journal subject: GASTROENTEROLOGIA / TRANSPLANTE Year: 2022 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Liver Transplantation Type of study: Clinical_trials / Guideline / Prognostic_studies / Qualitative_research Aspects: Equity_inequality Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Liver Transpl Journal subject: GASTROENTEROLOGIA / TRANSPLANTE Year: 2022 Document type: Article
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