Age-related discrimination can add to healthcare woes
Discrimination by doctors or hospitals can make older patients even sicker
2015-03-12
(Press-News.org) Being discriminated against by the healthcare profession or system can cause much more than just mere distress to older people. Such experiences can literally be bad for their health. A national survey shows that one in every three older Americans who are on the receiving end of age-related discrimination in the healthcare setting will likely develop new or worsened functional ailments in due course. This follows a study1 led by Stephanie Rogers, a fellow in geriatrics at UC San Francisco in the United States, and published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine2, published by Springer.
It is the first to specifically investigate the health effects that discrimination in the health setting has on older adults. Rogers and her colleagues analyzed data from 6,017 Americans older than 50 who took part in the 2008, 2010 and 2012 nationally representative Health and Retirement Study. The survey assessed important aspects of the aging process, and included questions about healthcare discrimination.
One in every five respondents experienced healthcare-related discrimination. Age was the most common reason cited for being on the receiving end of such behavior by respondents of all sexes and age groups, as well as those who have difficulty completing daily tasks. It was also the number one reason given by members of most racial or ethnic groups, with African American being the exception. Follow-up studies further showed that almost a third of older adults (28.5 percent) who frequently experienced such discrimination subsequently developed new or worsened disabilities over the course of the four years. In contrast, participants who never or seldom experienced such treatment were more likely to maintain their health status.
According to Rogers, the results suggest that healthcare discrimination differs from discrimination outside of the medical setting. She believes it is more strongly linked to the development of disability among older patients and their increased inability to care for themselves.
"Reducing experiences of discrimination and the perception of discrimination should be a priority in its own right," says Rogers, who calls for more research into the reasons, sources and precise nature of the relationship between healthcare discrimination and the development of disability.
"Providers and healthcare workers can aim to treat each patient with respect, dignity and fairness regardless of age, race or socioeconomic status, and this in turn may improve the function of our aging society," she adds. "Hopefully, we will find that reducing experiences of discrimination improves the function and well-being of older adults, sparing them, their family, caregivers and society of financial, physical and emotional distress."
INFORMATION:
Reference:
1. Rogers, S. et al. (2015). Discrimination in Healthcare Settings is Associated with Disability in Older Adults: Health and Retirement Study, 2008-2012, Journal of General Internal Medicine. DOI: 10.1007/s11606-015-3233-6.
2. The Journal of General Internal Medicine is the official journal of the Society for General Internal Medicine.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-03-12
NEW YORK, NY -Where you receive medical care impacts many things - including whether or not you receive inappropriate medical tests, according to a new study.
Researchers from NYU Langone Medical Center and its Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer Center, in a new retrospective study publishing online March 12th in JAMA Oncology, conclude that patients with low-risk prostate or breast cancer were more likely to receive inappropriate imaging during treatment, based on the region of the country in which they received medical care.
They examined medical records from 2004-2007 ...
2015-03-12
An association of high rates of inappropriate imaging for prostate cancer and breast cancer identified in a study of Medicare beneficiaries suggests that, at the regional level, regional culture and infrastructure could contribute to inappropriate imaging, something policymakers should want to consider as they seek to improve the quality of care and reduce health care spending, according to a study published online by JAMA Oncology.
Researchers have estimated that 30 percent of resources spent on health care in the United States does not improve the health of patients. ...
2015-03-12
In a group of patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer at 40 or younger, 1.3 percent of the patients carried germline TP53 gene mutations, although none of the patients met the clinical criteria for an inherited cancer syndrome associated with higher lifetime risks of multiple cancers, according to a study published online by JAMA Oncology.
Li-Fraumeni syndrome is an inherited cancer syndrome usually characterized by germline TP53 mutations in which patients can develop early-onset cancers and have an increased risk for a wide array of other cancers including colorectal. ...
2015-03-12
Cochlear implantation was associated with improved speech perception and cognitive function in adults 65 years or older with profound hearing loss, according to a report published online by JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery.
Hearing impairment is associated with cognitive decline. In cases of severe to profound hearing loss where there is no benefit from conventional amplification (i.e. hearing aids), cochlear implantation that uses direct electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve has proven successful and selected older patients are among those who can benefit, ...
2015-03-12
WASHINGTON - Increasing the minimum age of legal access (MLA) to tobacco products will prevent or delay initiation of tobacco use by adolescents and young adults, particularly those ages 15 to 17, and improve the health of Americans across the lifespan, says a new report from the Institute of Medicine. The committee that conducted the study estimated the likely reduction in tobacco-use initiation that would be achieved by raising the MLA for tobacco products to either 19 years old, 21 years old, or 25 years, and used two tobacco-use simulation models to quantify the accompanying ...
2015-03-12
DURHAM, N.C. - The newest guidelines for the use of cholesterol-lowering statins in people at risk of heart disease may be too generic, excluding middle-aged adults who could benefit from the drugs, and over-prescribing in older adults, according to a new study from the Duke Clinical Research Institute.
But small adjustments to guidelines could enable doctors to catch more people between the ages of 40 to 55 with premature heart disease, and prevent unnecessary medication for many adults over age 65, according to the analysis, published this month in the Journal of the ...
2015-03-12
Boston, Mass., USA - Today at the 93rd General Session and Exhibition of the International Association for Dental Research, researcher Sheila Arvikar, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA, will present a study titled "Inflammation in the Mouth and Joints in Rheumatoid Arthritis." The IADR General Session is being held in conjunction with the 44th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Dental Research and the 39th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association for Dental Research.
Periodontitis shares pathogenic mechanisms with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) ...
2015-03-12
Findings from the largest review of clinical trials to date to determine whether patients prescribed the smoking cessation drug Varenicline (brand name Champix in the UK) are at an increased risk of neuropsychiatric events are published online in the British Medical Journal [BMJ] today [12 Mar].
The drug, which was first licensed in the UK in 2006, has been shown to be the most clinically effective smoking cessation medicine for reducing nicotine cravings and withdrawal symptoms for short-term abstinence. However, since its introduction there have been concerns over its ...
2015-03-12
ATLANTA - March 12, 2015-Increasing colorectal cancer screening rates to 80% by 2018 would prevent an additional 21,000 colorectal cancer deaths per year by 2030, according to a new study. The study is the first to estimate the public health benefits of increasing screening rates to "80% by 2018," a recent initiative from the National Colorectal Cancer Roundtable (NCCRT), a national coalition of public, private, and voluntary organizations, to aim for screening rates of 80% in the United States by 2018. The study is co-authored by American Cancer Society epidemiologist ...
2015-03-12
Using gene therapy to produce a mutant human protein with unusually high blood-clotting power, scientists have successfully treated dogs with the bleeding disorder hemophilia, without triggering an unwanted immune response. In addition, the "turbocharged" clotting factor protein eliminated pre-existing antibodies that often weaken conventional treatments for people with hemophilia.
"Our findings may provide a new approach to gene therapy for hemophilia and perhaps other genetic diseases that have similar complications from inhibiting antibodies," said the study leader, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Age-related discrimination can add to healthcare woes
Discrimination by doctors or hospitals can make older patients even sicker