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Postdischarge Outcomes and Health Care Utilization Among Hispanic/Latinx Injury Survivors

  • Madeline Valverde
  • , Saba Ilkhani
  • , Nathaniel Pinkes
  • , Leah Froehle
  • , Gezzer Ortega
  • , John O. Hwabejire
  • , Sabrina E. Sanchez
  • , Adil H. Haider
  • , Ali Salim
  • , Geoffrey A. Anderson
  • , Juan P. Herrera-Escobar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective: – We sought to compare postdischarge outcomes and health care utilization between English-speaking non-Hispanic White (NHW), English-speaking Hispanic/Latinx (ESHL), and Spanish-speaking Hispanic/Latinx (SSHL) survivors of traumatic injury. Background: – While there is evidence of racial and ethnic disparities in health care utilization and postdischarge outcomes after injury, the role of English-language proficiency in these disparities remains unclear. Methods: – Moderate to severely injured adults from 3 level-1 trauma centers completed an interview in English or Spanish between 6 and 12 months postinjury to assess physical health-related quality-of-life (SF-12-PCS), return to work, and postdischarge health care utilization. The language used in the interview was used as a proxy for English-language proficiency, and participants were categorized as either NHW (reference), ESHL, or SSHL. Multivariable regression models estimated independent associations between language and race/ethnicity with SF-12-PCS, return to work, and postdischarge health care utilization outcomes. Results: – A total of 3304 injury survivors were followed: 2977 (90%) NHW, 203 (6%) ESHL, and 124 (4%) SSHL. In adjusted analyses, no significant differences were observed between ESHL and NHW injury survivors for any outcomes at 6 to 12 months postinjury. However, SSHL injury survivors exhibited a lower mean SF-12-PCS (41.6 vs. 38.5), −3.07 (95% CI=−5.47, −0.66; P=0.012), decreased odds of returning to work [odds ratio (OR)=0.47; CI=0.27–0.81; P=0.007], and were less likely to engage in non–injury-related outpatient visits, such as primary care visits (OR=0.45; 95% CI=0.28–0.73; P=0.001), compared with NHW patients. Conclusion: – Hispanic/Latinx injury survivors have worse postdischarge outcomes and lower non–injury-related health care utilization than NHW if they have limited English-language proficiency. Addressing LEP-related barriers to care could help mitigate outcome and health care utilization disparities among Hispanic/Latinx injury survivors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)428-434
Number of pages7
JournalAnnals of Surgery
Volume283
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ethnic disparities
  • injury outcomes
  • language disparities
  • limited English proficiency
  • racial disparities

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