| Literature DB >> 25028619 |
Charles Ellis1, Hyacinth I Hyacinth2, Jamie Beckett1, Wuwei Feng3, Marc Chimowitz2, Bruce Ovbiagele2, Dan Lackland2, Robert Adams2.
Abstract
Background. Significant racial and ethnic disparities in stroke incidence, severity, and morbidity have been consistently reported; however, less is known about potential differences in poststroke rehabilitation outcomes. Objective. To examine racial and ethnic differences in poststroke rehabilitation outcomes. Methods. We completed an in-depth search of Medline and several major journals dedicated to publishing research articles on stroke, rehabilitation, and racial-ethnic patterns of disease over a 10-year period (2003-2012). We identified studies that reported rehabilitation outcomes and the race or ethnicity of at least two groups. Results. 17 studies involving 429,108 stroke survivors met inclusion criteria for the review. The majority (94%) of studies examined outcomes between Blacks and Whites. Of those studies examining outcomes between Blacks and Whites, 59% showed that Blacks were generally less likely to achieve equivalent functional improvement following rehabilitation. Blacks were more likely to experience lower FIM gain or change scores (range: 1-60%) and more likely to have lower efficiency scores (range: 5-16%) than Whites. Conclusions. Black stroke survivors appear to generally achieve poorer functional outcomes than White stroke survivors. Future studies are warranted to evaluate the precise magnitude of these differences, whether they go beyond chance, and the underlying contributory mechanisms.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25028619 PMCID: PMC4084586 DOI: 10.1155/2014/950746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
Figure 1Flow chart of selected studies.
Summary of studies reporting racial or ethnic differences in rehabilitation outcomes.
| Study [ref. no.] | Data source | Sample | Outcome | Time of measure | Severity controlled | Results |
| Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Horner et al., 2003 [ | Patients hospitalized in 9 VAMCs 1995–1997 | 738 (31.2% Black) | Rankin | Admit-D/C | Yes | Improvement after 3 days of rehab | 0.007 | Low income Blacks had worse recovery; delay in rehab initiation had greater impact on Blacks |
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| Moorthy et al., 2004 [ | Patients in IP rehab |
‡Black: 56 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C | NR | Small statistically significant differences in FIM gain scores among ethnic groups |
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| Bhandari et al., 2005 [ | Patients in community based IP rehab facility | Black: 419 | FIM | D/C-3 months | No | Improvement at D/C |
| Blacks with less improvement but more likely to be discharged home |
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| Nichols-Larsen et al., 2005 [ | EXCITE trial | White: 153 | SIS | 3–9 months after stroke | No | Non-Whites reported lower HRQOL in the physical domain | 0.003 | |
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| Keng et al., 2005 [ | Patients in urban community hospital |
‡Black: 83 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C | FIM gain higher for Hispanic and Caucasian but only significant between Hispanics and Blacks ( | |
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| Chiou-Tan et al., 2006 [ | UDSMR data 2000–2003 | Black: 83 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C |
| Blacks with higher scores on admission (68.89), compared to Whites (66.50) and Hispanics (58.89) ( |
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| Hinson et al., 2007 [ | Patients seen at outpatient medical center | Black: 66 | VO2 peak, | Admit | No | Walking velocity |
| Reported as |
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| Ottenbacher et al., 2008 [ | UDSMR data; IP rehab in 2002-2003 | Black: 25,334 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | D/C FIM |
| Differences in functional status across race groups were related to age. White was reference group. |
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| Hinojosa et al., 2009 [ | Veterans in the US and Puerto Rico |
‡Black: 30 | FIM | D/C | No | D/C motor FIM | 0.000 | In HLM models and controlling for time, Blacks had average FIM 4.66 points higher than Whites ( |
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| Horn et al., 2010 [ | Six US inpatient rehabilitation facilities | Black: 239 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C |
| Moderate and severe strokes analyzed separately |
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| Deutscher et al., 2010 [ | Six US inpatient rehabilitation facilities | Black: 239 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Blacks with lower discharge FIM (In OLS models using patient variables, nontherapy ancillaries, and use of PT/OT) | 0.015 | |
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| Liu et al., | Medicare assessment and claims data | Black: 33,639 | FIM: 12 | Admit-D/C | No | Blacks had lower functional status than Whites after adjusting for covariates | NR | |
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| Putnam et al., 2010 [ | Six US inpatient rehabilitation facilities |
‡Blacks: 239 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C |
| Significant differences among those with severe stroke; no differences among moderate stroke |
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| Roth et al., 2011 [ | Patients enrolled in REGARDS study | Blacks: 40 | BI | Admit-1 year | No | Race-Adjusted Coefficients |
| Blacks showed greater deficits on multiple 1-year outcome measures |
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| Wang et al., 2011 [ | Inpatient rehabilitation hospital | 1908 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C |
| Moderate and severe strokes analyzed separately |
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| Rabadi et al., 2012 [ | Acute stroke rehabilitation unit | Black: 115 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C | 0.028 | No significant differences noted in total FIM, FIM-ADL, or motor FIM |
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| Berges et al., 2012 [ | 11 US IP facilities | Black: 150 | FIM | Admit-D/C | No | Improvement at D/C |
| No significant racial differences on admission |
Admit: admission; D/C: discharge; NR: not reported; NS: not significant; IP: inpatient; IRH: inpatient rehab hospital; FIM: functional independence measure; BI: Barthel Index; MRS: Modified Rankin Scale; SIS: Stroke Impact Scale; MMSE: Mini Mental Status Exam; IRF-PAI: inpatient rehabilitation facilities-patient assessment instrument; HRQOL: health related quality of life; UDSMR: Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation; EXCITE: extremity constraint induced therapy evaluation; REGARDS: reasons for geographic and racial differences in stroke.
‡Reported as African American in study.
∞Reported as Caucasian in study.
†Refers to group statistically significant.
Select studies reporting FIM admission, discharge, gain, and efficiency scores.
| Study [ref. no.] | FIM admission | FIM discharge | FIM gain | FIM efficiency | Follow-up |
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| Moorthy et al., 2004 [ | Blacks: 7.1 | ||||
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| Bhandari et al., 2005 [ | Blacks: 57.24 | FIM gain is 1.9 points lower for Blacks than Whites ( | Three months | ||
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| Keng et al., 2005 [ | Black: 18.9 | ||||
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| Chiou-Tan et al., 2006 [ | Blacks: 68.89 | Blacks: 90.42 | Blacks: 21.53 | Blacks: 1.43 | |
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| Ottenbacher et al., 2008 [ | Blacks: 58.01 | Blacks: 80.23 | Blacks: 1.53 | ||
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| Hinojosa et al., 2009 [ | Motor FIM: | 12 months | |||
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| Horn et al. 2010 [ | Moderate: | Moderate: | Moderate: | ||
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| Liu et al., | Blacks: 46.9 | ||||
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| Putman et al., 2010 [ | Blacks: 63 | Blacks: 89.1 | Lower motor FIM increase ( | ||
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| Rabadi et al., 2012 [ | Blacks: 62.5 | Blacks: 19.2 | |||
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| Berges et al., 2012 [ | Blacks: 58.1 | Blacks: 82.9 | Three months | ||