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Disparities in health in the United States: An overview of the social determinants of health for otolaryngologists

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2017

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John Wiley and Sons Inc.
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Bergmark, Regan W., and Ahmad R. Sedaghat. 2017. “Disparities in health in the United States: An overview of the social determinants of health for otolaryngologists.” Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology 2 (4): 187-193. doi:10.1002/lio2.81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lio2.81.

Abstract

Objectives: Social determinants of health include social and demographic factors such as poverty, education status, race and ethnicity, gender, insurance status, and other factors that influence (1) development of illness, (2) ability to obtain and utilize healthcare, and (3) health and healthcare outcomes. In otolaryngology, as in other subspecialty surgical fields, we are constantly confronted by patients’ social and demographic circumstances including poverty, language barriers, and lack of health insurance and yet there is limited research on how these factors impact health equity in our field, or how attention to these patient characteristics may improve health equity. This review provides the reader with a framework to understand the social determinants of health including how socioeconomic status, insurance status, race, gender, and other factors impact health. Data Sources and Review Methods Foundational papers on the social determinants of health are reviewed, as well as otolaryngology publications focused on health and healthcare disparities. Results: The social determinants of health have a major impact on patient health as well as healthcare utilization, but there is a relative lack of data on these factors and how they can be addressed within otolaryngology. Incorporating tools to measure social and demographic characteristics and actually report on these measures is a first simple step to increase the data on the social determinants of health as they pertain to otolaryngology. Conclusion: More research is needed on the social determinants of health, and how they impact otolaryngic disease. Medicare's Accountable Care Organization models will increasingly change the way in which physicians are reimbursed, making the social determinants of health central not only to our moral conscience but also the bottom line. Level of Evidence 4

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Health Policy and Outcomes, Healthcare disparities, healthcare delivery, insurance, socioeconomic factors, primary care, uninsured, Medicaid

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