# Inflammatory Bowel Disease Care Barriers and Medication Beliefs in a Majority Hispanic Population: A Patient Survey

**Authors:** Florence-Damilola Odufalu, Aarti A Patel, Kathleen L Deering, Christian F Arias, Margaret Yung, Alicia C Shillington

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/crocol/otaf058 · Crohn's & Colitis 360 · 2025-10-06

## TL;DR

This study finds that majority Hispanic IBD patients face greater care delays, financial burdens, and medication concerns compared to White/non-Hispanic patients, highlighting the need for culturally sensitive approaches.

## Contribution

The study provides novel insights into IBD care barriers and medication beliefs in a majority Hispanic population, emphasizing disparities in diagnosis, financial strain, and emotional support.

## Key findings

- BIPOC/H patients reported longer diagnostic delays and higher financial difficulties compared to White/non-Hispanic patients.
- BIPOC/H patients expressed greater concerns about medication harm, overuse, and dependency.
- BIPOC/H patients had less access to emotional and community support resources for IBD.

## Abstract

Data regarding barriers to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) care in largely Hispanic populations is limited. This study evaluated barriers in Black/Indigenous/People of Color/Hispanics (BIPOC/H) and White/non-Hispanics (W/NH) with IBD.

An anonymous survey was administered to adult IBD patients at Keck Medical Center of the University of Southern California and Los Angeles General Medical Center between March and October 2024. Data included the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems and Barriers to Care surveys, the Medication Adherence Rating Scale-4, and the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire. Analyses compared BIPOC/H and W/NH patients via X2 and t-tests.

Included were 172 of 195 eligible patients (88% response). Compared to W/NH patients, BIPOC/Hs reported delays of longer than 1 year in receiving a diagnosis, 49.6% versus 27.8% (P = 0.015) more IBD-related financial difficulty, 55.6% versus 22.2% (P = 0.001); more difficulty obtaining emotional support (56.4% vs. 33.3%, P = 0.05); and community support for IBD (45.0% vs. 20.0%, P = 0.004). BIPOC/H patients had higher mean worries about medication harm (13.7 vs. 11.6, P < 0.001), concerns about long-term medication use (17.2 vs. 13.9, P < 0.001), and worries medications are overused (9.0 vs. 7.6, P < 0.002). Specific beliefs, including “medications are toxic” and concerns about dependency, were significantly more prevalent in BIPOC/H respondents (P < 0.05).

BIPOC/H patients with IBD had more delays in diagnosis, medication-related concerns, IBD-related financial difficulties, and less social/emotional support for their IBD versus W/NHs, underscoring the need for culturally sensitive care, identification and communication of emotional, and community support resources, as well as medication decision support.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** inflammatory bowel disease (MONDO:0005265)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IBD (MESH:D015212)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12604095/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12604095