Abstract
Health disparities in rheumatic disease are well established and urgently need addressing. Obstacles to precision medicine equity span both the clinical and the research domains, with a focus placed on structural barriers limiting equitable health care access and inclusivity in research. Less articulated factors include the use of inaccurate population descriptors and the existence of research silos in rheumatology research, which creates a knowledge gap that precludes addressing the health disparities and fulfilling the goals of precision medicine to understand the 'full patient'. The biopsychosocial model is a research framework that intertwines layers of biological and environmental effects to understand disease. However, very limited rheumatology research bridges across molecular and epidemiological studies of environmental exposures, such as physical and social determinants of health. In this Review, we discuss clinical obstacles to health care equity, including access to health care and the use of inaccurate language when labelling population groups. We explore the goals and data needed for research under the biopsychosocial model. We describe results from a rheumatic disease literature search that highlights the paucity of studies investigating the molecular influences of systemic exposures. We conclude with a list of considerations and recommendations to help achieve equitable precision medicine.
Published Version
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