Group Dynamics and Allocation of Advanced Heart Failure Therapies—Heart Transplants and Ventricular Assist Devices—By Gender, Racial, and Ethnic Group

Author:

Breathett Khadijah1ORCID,Yee Ryan2,Pool Natalie3ORCID,Thomas Hebdon Megan C.4ORCID,Knapp Shannon M.1,Herrera‐Theut Kathryn5,de Groot Esther6ORCID,Yee Erika7,Allen Larry A.8ORCID,Hasan Ayesha9,Lindenfeld JoAnn10,Calhoun Elizabeth11ORCID,Carnes Molly12ORCID,Sweitzer Nancy K.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Indiana University Indianapolis IN

2. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Research Team Indiana University Indianapolis IN

3. School of Nursing University of Northern Colorado Greeley CO

4. School of Nursing University of Texas Austin TX

5. Department of Medicine/Pediatrics University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI

6. Department of General Practice University Medical Center Utrecht Utrecht Netherlands

7. School of Medicine University of Arizona Tucson AZ

8. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine University of Colorado Denver CO

9. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus OH

10. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Vanderbilt University Nashville TN

11. Department of Population Health University of Kansas Lawrence KS

12. Department of Medicine University of Wisconsin Madison WI

13. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine University of Washington at St Louis St Louis MO

Abstract

Background US regulatory framework for advanced heart failure therapies (AHFT), ventricular assist devices, and heart transplants, delegate eligibility decisions to multidisciplinary groups at the center level. The subjective nature of decision‐making is at risk for racial, ethnic, and gender bias. We sought to determine how group dynamics impact allocation decision‐making by patient gender, racial, and ethnic group. Methods and Results We performed a mixed‐methods study among 4 AHFT centers. For ≈ 1 month, AHFT meetings were audio recorded. Meeting transcripts were evaluated for group function scores using de Groot Critically Reflective Diagnoses protocol (metrics: challenging groupthink, critical opinion sharing, openness to mistakes, asking/giving feedback, and experimentation; scoring: 1 to 4 [high to low quality]). The relationship between summed group function scores and AHFT allocation was assessed via hierarchical logistic regression with patients nested within meetings nested within centers, and interaction effects of group function score with gender and race, adjusting for patient age and comorbidities. Among 87 patients (24% women, 66% White race) evaluated for AHFT, 57% of women, 38% of men, 44% of White race, and 40% of patients of color were allocated to AHFT. The interaction between group function score and allocation by patient gender was statistically significant ( P =0.035); as group function scores improved, the probability of AHFT allocation increased for women and decreased for men, a pattern that was similar irrespective of racial and ethnic groups. Conclusions Women evaluated for AHFT were more likely to receive AHFT when group decision‐making processes were of higher quality. Further investigation is needed to promote routine high‐quality group decision‐making and reduce known disparities in AHFT allocation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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