Surgical Care Through a Community Free Clinic-Ambulatory Surgical Center Partnership

Author:

Park Flora S.1,Pang Jonathan C.12ORCID,Yang Christopher D.1ORCID,Breziner Dalia1,Manzanarez-Felix Karlos O.1,Hoyos Juan Pablo1,Ruiz Andres M.3,Alvarez Claudia A.1ORCID,Swentek Lourdes Y.1,Chin Theresa L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma, Burns and Surgical Critical Care, Irvine School of Medicine, University of California, Orange, CA, USA

2. Institute for Global Health Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA

3. Department of General Surgery, Huntington Health, Pasadena, CA, USA

Abstract

Background Disparities secondary to underinsurance present throughout the surgical care continuum. Community free clinics are uniquely capable to provide health care services to the medically underserved, but surgery often falls outside their scope of care. Methods Retrospective chart review was conducted on consecutive community free clinic patients receiving free surgical services via referral to a partnering ambulatory surgery center between March 2016 and September 2021. Those with documented contact information were recruited 1-3 years post-procedure for long-term quality-of-life (LTQOL) outcomes assessment via modified Veterans RAND 12-item health survey. Results Of 142 included patients, 95.7% identified as Hispanic/Latino and 75.6% were uninsured. Twelve patients had cancerous or precancerous lesions detected and/or removed through diagnostic or definitive procedures. 3.5% experienced postoperative complication including bacterial (n = 2) or fungal (n = 1) surgical site infection and wound dehiscence (n = 2). With a 48.9% response rate, no significant differences in sociodemographic or clinical characteristics were found between surveyed vs non-surveyed patients. Of surveyed patients, 59.7% and 52.2% reported pre-/post-operative improvement in physical health and emotional health, respectively. Discussion Free diagnostic screening procedures provided timely diagnoses while free definitive surgeries safely and positively impacted long-term patient-reported physical health. Longitudinal, multidisciplinary follow-up and social support may be warranted to concurrently improve emotional and mental health in similarly underinsured populations.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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