OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of race on acute, rehabilitation, and long-term outcomes after spinal cord injury (SCI). DESIGN: Two case control studies (study 1: acute and rehabilitation outcomes, study 2: long-term outcomes) in which white and nonwhite individuals were matched case for case on multiple demographic, medical, and geographic characteristics with the rationale being that a case-control methodology would increase the internal validity of the design, thereby increasing confidence in the assertion that any between-group differences observed may be specifically attributed to race. SETTING: Data drawn from the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems. Institutional practice and general community. PARTICIPANTS: Study 1: 187 pairs of individuals, study 2: 158 pairs of matched individuals. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcome measures assessed included economic (eg, cost of care), treatment-related (eg, length of hospital stay), functional (eg, FIM instrument), and medical (eg, number of medical complications) variables, as well as self-reported life satisfaction, level of handicap, and mental and physical health. RESULTS: In study 1, none of the outcome measures differed significantly across racial groups. Similarly, study 2 failed to indicate significant differences in any of the outcome variables across racial groups, with the exception that nonwhites were at increased risk of greater self-reported handicap in the area of mobility. Power analyses indicated these finding were not merely the result of inadequate power. CONCLUSION: For the outcomes assessed in studies 1 and 2, race appeared to act primarily as a proxy for other variables (eg, injury severity, age, educational achievement), which in turn may be associated with poor outcome after SCI. Theoretical implications and recommendations are discussed. Copyright 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of race on acute, rehabilitation, and long-term outcomes after spinal cord injury (SCI). DESIGN: Two case control studies (study 1: acute and rehabilitation outcomes, study 2: long-term outcomes) in which white and nonwhite individuals were matched case for case on multiple demographic, medical, and geographic characteristics with the rationale being that a case-control methodology would increase the internal validity of the design, thereby increasing confidence in the assertion that any between-group differences observed may be specifically attributed to race. SETTING: Data drawn from the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems. Institutional practice and general community. PARTICIPANTS: Study 1: 187 pairs of individuals, study 2: 158 pairs of matched individuals. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcome measures assessed included economic (eg, cost of care), treatment-related (eg, length of hospital stay), functional (eg, FIM instrument), and medical (eg, number of medical complications) variables, as well as self-reported life satisfaction, level of handicap, and mental and physical health. RESULTS: In study 1, none of the outcome measures differed significantly across racial groups. Similarly, study 2 failed to indicate significant differences in any of the outcome variables across racial groups, with the exception that nonwhites were at increased risk of greater self-reported handicap in the area of mobility. Power analyses indicated these finding were not merely the result of inadequate power. CONCLUSION: For the outcomes assessed in studies 1 and 2, race appeared to act primarily as a proxy for other variables (eg, injury severity, age, educational achievement), which in turn may be associated with poor outcome after SCI. Theoretical implications and recommendations are discussed. Copyright 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Authors: Kathleen M Morrow; Sara Vargas; Rochelle K Rosen; Anna L Christensen; Liz Salomon; Lawrence Shulman; Candelaria Barroso; Joseph L Fava Journal: AIDS Behav Date: 2007-02-27
Authors: Mana K Ali; Samantha M Hack; Clayton H Brown; Deborah Medoff; Lijuan Fang; Elizabeth A Klingaman; Stephanie G Park; Lisa B Dixon; Julie A Kreyenbuhl Journal: J Racial Ethn Health Disparities Date: 2017-04-14
Authors: Denise C Fyffe; Anne Deutsch; Amanda L Botticello; Steven Kirshblum; Kenneth J Ottenbacher Journal: Arch Phys Med Rehabil Date: 2014-08-02 Impact factor: 3.966
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