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Hispanics
appear to face poorer quality Nursing Home
Care
A new Brown University study of nursing home
care found that homes serving mostly
Hispanic residents provided poorer quality
care compared to facilities whose patients
were mostly white. Details were published
recently in the
Journal of the American Medical Directors
Association.
PROVIDENCE, R.I.
[Brown University] — Nursing homes serving
primarily Hispanic residents provided poorer
quality care compared to facilities whose
patients were mostly white, according to
Brown University research. Details were
published recently in the
Journal of the American Medical Directors
Association.
Researchers reached their conclusions after
looking at the rate of bed sores at nursing
homes with high concentrations of Hispanic
patients, compared to others with low
concentrations.
Hispanics at nursing homes with a high rate
of Hispanic residents were more likely to
have bed sores, compared to Hispanics living
in nursing homes with fewer Hispanic
residents.
Michael Gerardo, adjunct assistant professor
of community health at the Warren Alpert
Medical School of Brown University, led the
research.
Two others served as co-authors — Joan Teno,
M.D., professor of community health and
medicine and an expert on end-of-life care,
and Vincent Mor, chair of the Department of
Community Health, whose work focuses on
nursing home care among other areas.
Gerardo and the other professors said that
more research is needed to determine the
implications of their findings, directed
specifically at the root cause for
disparities between high-quality and
low-quality nursing homes.
“A systemic evaluation of the difference in
the process of care between high- and
low-quality nursing homes is warranted in
order to reduce nursing home disparities,”
Gerardo said.
Their work comes less than two years after a
landmark 2007 study, published in
Health Affairs,
that suggests blacks are more likely than
whites to live in poor-quality nursing
homes.
That study found that the problem was worst
in the Midwest, and that inequalities in
care are closely correlated to racial
segregation. Mor was lead author for that
study.
For the study of Hispanics in nursing homes,
the researchers looked at two data sources.
One, the national repository of the Minimum
Data Set, is a federally mandated report of
health status, function and demographics on
all nursing home residents.
The other, which is known as the Oscar
database system, collects information on
patients and nursing homes, via the Centers
for Medicaid and Medicare Services.
Residents were included if they were age 65
or older, living at free-standing nursing
homes in California, New Mexico, Texas,
Arizona or Colorado.
Funding from the National Institutes of
Health, National Institute on Aging, A
National Research Service Award
Institutional Training Grant and the
Commonwealth Fund helped support the study.
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