Building evidence to advance health equity: a systematic review on care-related outcomes for older, minoritised populations in long-term care homes

Author:

Scott Mary M12ORCID,Ménard Alixe23,Sun Annie H4,Murmann Maya24,Ramzy Amy4,Rasaputra Prabasha4,Fleming Michelle45,Orosz Zsófia45,Huynh Chau4,Welch Vivian46,Cooper-Reed Anna4,Hsu Amy T2457ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Public Health Agency of Canada , Ottawa, ON , Canada

2. The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute , Ottawa, ON , Canada

3. Department of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa , Ottawa, ON , Canada

4. Bruyere Research Institute , Ottawa, ON , Canada

5. Ontario Centres for Learning , Research and Innovation in Long-Term Care, Ottawa, ON , Canada

6. The Campbell Collaboration , Philadelphia, PA , USA

7. Department of Family Medicine , University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Advancing health equity requires more contextualised evidence. Objectives To synthesise published evidence using an existing framework on the origins of health disparities and determine care-related outcome disparities for residents of long-term care, comparing minoritised populations to the context-specific dominant population. Design Systematic review. Subjects Residents of 24-hour long-term care homes. Methods The protocol was registered a priori with PROSPERO (CRD42021269489). Literature published between 1 January 2000 and 26 September 2021, was searched, including studies comparing baseline characteristics and outcomes in minoritised versus dominant populations. Dual screening, two-reviewer verification for extraction, and risk of bias assessments were conducted to ensure rigour. Studies were synthesized using a conceptual framework to contextualise evidence according to multi-level factors contributing to the development of care disparities. Results Twenty-one of 34 included studies demonstrated disparities in care outcomes for minoritised groups compared to majority groups. Thirty-one studies observed differences in individual-level characteristics (e.g. age, education, underlying conditions) upon entry to homes, with several outcome disparities (e.g. restraint use, number of medications) present at baseline and remaining or worsening over time. Significant gaps in evidence were identified, particularly an absence of literature on provider information and evidence on the experience of intersecting minority identities that contribute to care-related outcome disparities in long-term care. Conclusion This review found differences in minoritised populations’ care-related outcomes. The findings provide guidance for future health equity policy and research—supporting diverse and intersectional capacity building in long-term care.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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