P-2076. Understanding the Impact of Patient Factors in Infectious Diseases Referral Completion
Karina Garcia, Rose Bethanica Gelin, Rayven Frierson, Djenabou Sow, Elinel Gonzalez-Baez, Jennifer A Johnson, Sophia Koo

TL;DR
The study finds that Black patients and males are more likely to have incomplete infectious disease referrals, highlighting disparities in healthcare access.
Contribution
The paper identifies demographic disparities in referral completion for infectious disease care and suggests targeted outreach to improve health equity.
Findings
Black patients had 1.59-fold higher odds of incomplete referrals compared to non-Black patients.
Males had 1.32-fold higher odds of incomplete referrals compared to females.
Residents of economically disadvantaged zip codes had higher referral non-completion rates.
Abstract
Many patients face barriers to accessing optimal care of their infections, such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and COVID-19, where prompt diagnosis and treatment are crucial. We investigated the association between demographic characteristics and non-completion of referrals to our ID clinic for consultation, requested by each patient’s clinical care team.Table 1:Patient characteristics.Figure 1:Aggregation maps of ID clinic referral non-completion rates in Massachusetts zip codes. The color scale ranges from light blue, representing low rates of incomplete referrals, to dark blue, indicating high rates of incomplete referrals (ArcGIS, 2024). Patient characteristics. Aggregation maps of ID clinic referral non-completion rates in Massachusetts zip codes. The color scale ranges from light blue, representing low rates of incomplete referrals, to dark blue, indicating high rates of incomplete…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Systems and Technology · Telemedicine and Telehealth Implementation · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
