A Culturally Relevant Care Model to Reduce Health Disparities Among Medicaid Recipients.
Andrew JohnsonAnita C MurckoAnabell Castro ThompsonChandra MericaMark StephanPublished in: Hispanic health care international : the official journal of the National Association of Hispanic Nurses (2021)
Health disparities among Hispanics are associated with poorer health status across multiple health conditions, greater use of high-acuity services, and lower use of care continuity and preventive services. A new integrated delivery organization (IDO) designed around culturally responsive care aims to reduce health disparities and improve health outcomes among the Hispanic community by deploying a multifeatured approach. The IDO combines the universal administration of a culturally sensitive health risk screening tool, the delivery of culturally appropriate medical, behavioral and spiritual health, and creative support of provider practices with training and informational resources, financial incentives, actionable data, technology, and cultural sensitivity training for providers and staff. The IDO further distinguishes its unique approach by partnering with a university informatics program to establish a local learning health care system destined to enrich the evidence base for culturally appropriate interventions that reduce health disparities. Longitudinal research is currently underway that focuses on the impact of culturally motivated interventions on resource utilization, retention, and quality.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- public health
- mental health
- affordable care act
- primary care
- health information
- health risk
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- physical activity
- human health
- health insurance
- health promotion
- hepatitis c virus
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- social media
- electronic health record
- pain management
- cross sectional
- cancer therapy