Abstract

BackgroundRacial disparities are common in healthcare. Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a leading cause of preventable harm, and disparities observed in prevention practices. We examined the impact of a patient-centered VTE education bundle on the non-administration of preventive prophylaxis by race.MethodsA post-hoc, subset analysis (stratified by race) of a larger nonrandomized trial. Pre-post comparisons analysis were conducted on 16 inpatient units; study periods were October 2014 through March 2015 (baseline) and April through December 2015 (post-intervention). Patients on 4 intervention units received the patient-centered, nurse educator-led intervention if the electronic health record alerted a non-administered dose of VTE prophylaxis. Patients on 12 control units received no intervention. We compared the conditional odds of non-administered doses of VTE prophylaxis when patient refusal was a reason for non-administration, stratified by race.ResultsOf 272 patient interventions, 123 (45.2%) were white, 126 (46.3%) were black, and 23 (8.5%) were other races. A significant reduction was observed in the odds of non-administration of prophylaxis on intervention units compared to control units among patients who were black (OR 0.61; 95% CI, 0.46–0.81, p<0.001), white (OR 0.57; 95% CI, 0.44–0.75, p<0.001), and other races (OR 0.50; 95% CI, 0.29–0.88, p = 0.015).ConclusionOur finding suggests that the patient education materials, developed collaboratively with a diverse group of patients, improved patient’s understanding and the importance of VTE prevention through prophylaxis. Quality improvement interventions should examine any differential effects by patient characteristics to ensure disparities are addressed and all patients experience the same benefits.

Highlights

  • Health disparities occur across many dimensions and result from a range of social determinants.[1]

  • A significant reduction was observed in the odds of non-administration of prophylaxis on intervention units compared to control units among patients who were black, white, and other races

  • Our finding suggests that the patient education materials, developed collaboratively with a diverse group of patients, improved patient’s understanding and the importance of Venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention through prophylaxis

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Summary

Introduction

Health disparities occur across many dimensions and result from a range of social determinants.[1] Racial disparities are common among hospitalized patients, which limits the impact of quality improvement strategies for all patient populations, potentially resulting in health disparities and undue costs.[2,3] Large nationally representative studies demonstrate differences in health care and outcomes among white, black, and other minority races.[4] Patient information in electronic health record (EHR) systems allows an analysis of health-related outcomes by different socioeconomic strata and racial/ethnic groups.[2,3] Health disparities are multifaceted and may be the result of inequitable (meaning unjust) care, inequalities in socioeconomic, behavioral or other factors. We examined the impact of a patient-centered VTE education bundle on the non-administration of preventive prophylaxis by race

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