Correlation of Patient-Reported Social Determinants of Health With Census Tract Measures of Socioeconomic Disadvantage in Patients With GI Cancers in Eastern North Carolina

Scarlett Hao, Ashley W. Quinn, John A. Iasiello, C. Suzanne Lea, Patrycja Popowicz, Yuanyuan Fu, William Irish, Alexander A. Parikh, Rebecca A. Snyder

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

PURPOSEInvestigating the impact of social determinants of health (SDOHs) on cancer care in large populations relies on census estimates. Routine clinic SDOH screening provides timely patient-level information which could inform best practices. This study evaluated the correlation between patient-reported SDOH needs and population-level census tract measures.METHODSThis was a retrospective cross-sectional study of a cohort of adult patients with GI malignancy screened for SDOHs such as financial insecurity, transportation, and food insecurity during initial outpatient evaluation at East Carolina University (formerly Vidant) Health Medical Center in Greenville, NC (November 2020-July 2021). Primary outcomes included number and severity of identified SDOH needs and area deprivation index (ADI) and census tract measures for each patient. Spearman rank correlations were calculated among patient-level needs and between patient-level needs and similar census tract measures.RESULTSOf 112 patients screened, 58.9% self-identified as White (n = 66) and 41.1% as Black (n = 46). A total of 50.5% (n = 54) resided in a rural county. The collective median state ADI rank was 7 (IQR, 5-9). The median household income was $38,125 in US dollars (USD) (IQR, $31,436-$48,934 [USD]). Only 12.5% (n = 14) reported a moderate or severe financial need. Among reported needs, financial need moderately correlated with food insecurity (coefficient, 0.46; P <.001) and transportation (coefficient, 0.45; P <.001). Overall, census tract measures and reported needs poorly correlated. Lack of transportation correlated with percentage of households without a vehicle (coefficient, 0.18; P =.03) and limited access to healthy foods (coefficient, 0.18; P =.04).CONCLUSIONGiven the poor correlation between reported and census needs, population-level measures may not accurately predict patient-reported needs. These findings highlight the importance of SDOH screening in the clinical setting to reduce health disparities and identify opportunities to improve care delivery.

Idioma originalEnglish (US)
Páginas (desde-hasta)1280-1288
Número de páginas9
PublicaciónJCO Oncology Practice
Volumen20
N.º9
DOI
EstadoPublished - sept 1 2024

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Health Policy
  • Oncology(nursing)

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