| Literature DB >> 30086754 |
Carlotta Piccardi1, Jens Detollenaere1, Pierre Vanden Bussche1,2, Sara Willems3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient safety is a quality indicator for primary care and it should be based on individual needs, and not differ among different social groups. Nevertheless, the attention on social disparities in patient safety has been mainly directed towards the hospital care, often overlooking the primary care setting. Therefore, this paper aims to synthesise social disparities in patient safety in the primary care setting.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Ethnicity; Gender; High-income countries; Income; Inequity; Patient safety; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30086754 PMCID: PMC6081855 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-018-0828-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Search strategy
| "Primary care OR Family Practice OR Family Medicine" [all fields] | AND | "Patient safety"a | AND | "Inequalit* OR inequit* OR disparit* OR Socioeconomic disparit* OR Socioeconomic difference* OR Socioeconomic status OR Socioeconomic factor* OR Socioeconomic level OR Social class OR Social position OR Social hierarchy OR Gender OR Ethnicity OR Educational achievement OR Educational attainment" |
| "Adverse events"a | ||||
| "Adverse effects"a | ||||
| "Safety management"a | ||||
| "Medication error"b | ||||
| "Administrative errors"c | ||||
| "Organizational errors"c | ||||
| "Diagnostic errors"d | ||||
| "Over-diagnosis"d | ||||
| "Under-diagnosis"d | ||||
| "Missed diagnosis"d | ||||
| "Medical error"d | ||||
| "Transitional care"e |
asearch terms for patient safety
bsearch terms for medication errors
csearch terms for administrative errors
dsearch terms for diagnostic errors
esearch terms for transition of care errors
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram for study selection
Description of the included studies
| N | Citation | Location | Outcome of interest | Patient safety domain | Study design | Major findings | Quality of the study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maserejian et al. (2009) [ | USA | Gender disparities in physicians’ diagnosis of coronary heart disease | Diagnostic error | Factorial experiment | Gender: diagnosis of coronary heart disease is significantly dependent on patient’s gender: women are less likely to be diagnosed with coronary heart disease; despite identical symptoms. | Fair |
| 2 | Hansen et al. (2008) [ | DK | Socioeconomic patients characteristics influencing delay in cancer diagnosis | Transition of care/ diagnostic error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: doctor and system delays: male cancer patients experience longer delays than female cancer patients. | Good |
| 3 | Henning et al. (2013) [ | AU & IT | Gender differences in referral patterns for bladder cancer | Diagnostic error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: men are 65% more likely to be referred to a specialist at the first episode of haematuria compared to women. | Fair |
| 4 | Kistler et al. (2010) [ | USA | Patient characteristics influencing the perceptions of mistakes in ambulatory care | Administrative error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: gender not associated with perception of mistakes. | Fair |
| 5 | Maeng et al. (2012) [ | USA | Perception of care coordination problems | Administrative error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: not studied. | Fair |
| 6 | McKinlay et al. (2012) [ | USA | Racial disparities in diabetes mellitus diagnosis | Diagnostic error | Mixed methods: survey, factorial experiment | Gender: not studied. | Good |
| 7 | Eva et al. (2010) [ | USA | Factors related to physicians’ changing their minds about a diagnosis | Diagnostic error | Factorial experiment | Gender: gender is no significant predictor of change of diagnosis. | Good |
| 8 | Cooper et al. (2016) [ | GBR& IRL | Socioeconomic patients’ characteristics influencing potentially inappropriate prescriptions | Medication error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: women have increased likelihood of potentially inappropriate prescriptions compared to men. | Fair |
| 9 | Becker et al. (2011) [ | USA | Racial disparities in opioid risk reduction strategies | Medication error | Retrospective Cohort Study | Gender: not studied. | Good |
| 10 | Ladapo et al. (2014) [ | USA | Patients’ characteristics influencing physicians’ decision making for cardiac stress testing use | Transition of care | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: women increased likelihood of undergoing or being referred for cardiac testing. | Fair |
| 11 | Lukakcho & Olfson (2012) | USA | Racial difference of depression diagnosis during first primary care visit | Diagnostic error | Cross-sectional study | Gender: not studied. | Fair |
| 12 | Hickner et al. (2007) | USA | Predictors of adverse events due to testing errors. | Administrative error | Cross-sectional Study | Gender: not studied. | Fair |
| 13 | Schröder et al. (2016) [ | NZL, ESP, SWE, ITA, BEL, DNK, DEU, ISR & GBR | Gender differences in antibiotic prescription | Medication error | Systematic review | Gender: Women are 27% more likely than men to receive antibiotic prescription; | Good |
| 14 | Green et al. (2013) [ | GBR | Factors associated with prescription of opioids for joint pain | Medication error | Prospective cohort study | Gender: female gender is associated with decreased frequency of opioid prescription. | Good |
| 15 | Fleming-Dutra et al. (2014) [ | USA | Racial disparities in diagnosis and antibiotic prescription for otitis media | Diagnostic error/ Medication error | Retrospective cohort study | Gender: not studied. | Good |