Mining the Health Disparities and Minority Health Bibliome: A Computational Scoping Review and Gap Analysis of 200,000+ Articles

Author:

Reyes Nieva HarryORCID,Bakken SuzanneORCID,Elhadad NoémieORCID

Abstract

AbstractWithout comprehensive examination of available literature on health disparities and minority health (HDMH), the field is left vulnerable to disproportionately focus on specific populations or conditions, curtailing our ability to fully advance health equity. Using scalable open-source methods, we conducted a computational scoping review of more than 200,000 articles to investigate major populations, conditions, and themes in the literature as well as notable gaps. We also compared trends in studied conditions to their relative prevalence in the general population using insurance claims (42MM Americans). HDMH publications represent 1% of articles in MEDLINE. Most studies are observational in nature, though randomized trial reporting has increased five-fold in the last twenty years. Half of all HDMH articles concentrate on only three disease groups (cancer, mental health, endocrine/metabolic disorders), while hearing, vision, and skin-related conditions are among the least well represented despite substantial prevalence. To support further investigation, we also present HDMH Monitor, an interactive dashboard and repository generated from the HDMH bibliome.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference65 articles.

1. United States Department of Health and Human Services. Task Force on Black and Minority Health., “Report of the Secretary’s Task Force on Black and Minority Health” (1985).

2. Institute of Medicine (US) Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care (National Academies Press (US), Washington (DC), 2003; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK220358/).

3. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, “2021 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report” (Rockville, MD:, 2021), (available at https://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqdr21/index.html).

4. Science Visioning to Advance the Next Generation of Health Disparities Research;American Journal of Public Health,2019

5. The Importance of Evaluating Health Disparities Research;American Journal of Public Health,2019

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