98 research outputs found
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Advances in diagnostic codes to document sexual assault in health care service.
OBJECTIVE: To explore trends in documented sexual abuse/assault (SA) related episodes in California hospitals and emergency departments (ED), including the impact of a change in health care service reporting codification (from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM) that more clearly defined SA in October 2015. DATA SOURCES: Hospital and ED data were drawn from Californias Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD). STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive and trend analyses of SA-related hospital and ED records (including patients demographic information) were conducted to determine whether changes in ICD codification had an impact on documented SA-related episodes. DATA COLLECTION: All SA-related episodes (ICD-9-CM codes 995.83, 995.53; ICD-10-CM codes T74.21-T74.22, T76.21-T76.22) in California hospitals and EDs for the last decade of available data (2008-2017) were analyzed (n = 20,215). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: An abrupt increase in documented SA episodes in hospitals and EDs began in October 2015, when specific ICD10 codes for suspected cases of SA were created. Documented SA-related episodes doubled in 1 month (164 vs. 385 episodes in September 2015 and October 2015, respectively). More than half (58.2%) of all SA-related episodes documented in Oct 2015 were coded as suspicious. The number of documented SA-related episodes continued increasing to the end of the time series (December 2017). Overall, the annual number of documented SA-related episodes increased by over 700% in only 4 years (900 vs. 6441 in 2013 and 2017, respectively), suggesting high rates of prior under-reporting and the need to introduce the new codes. African Americans were disproportionally impacted; however, the highest increases in age-adjusted rates between the ICD-9-CM and the ICD-10 codification period were found among the White population (2.46 vs. 16.53 per 100,000 inhabitants). CONCLUSIONS: SA episodes in the clinical population have been underestimated for many decades. Identifying SA victims and measuring SA-related health care utilization is a real challenge that needs further investigation
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Trauma Symptoms, Minority Stress, and Substance Use: Implications for Trauma Treatment in Sexual and Gender Minority Communities
Objective: Posttraumatic stress symptoms are very high among sexual and/or gender minority (SGM) people. Development and testing of trauma interventions with SGM people is needed, but first we need to understand who among SGM people are at greatest risk of posttraumatic stress symptoms, how minority stress may contribute, and the frequency of substance use comorbidity with significant posttraumatic stress symptoms among SGM people.
Method: General linear models and logistic regressions were used to examine demographic differences, minority stress, and substance use related to posttraumatic stress symptoms among a national sample of SGM people (N = 4,589, Mage = 32.1, 55% cisgender).
Results: All gender groups had greater posttraumatic stress symptoms than the reference group of cisgender men. All sexual orientation groups, except for straight/heterosexual SGM people, had greater posttraumatic stress symptoms than participants in the reference gay/lesbian group. Younger age and identifying as American Indian or Alaska Native and Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish was associated with more posttraumatic stress symptoms. Non-specific and SGM-specific minority stress were each related to greater odds of significant posttraumatic stress symptoms, even after accounting for Criterion A events. Among participants with significant posttraumatic stress symptoms, 13.6% were at risk for alcohol use disorder, and 56.4% were at risk for other substance use disorder.
Conclusions: Marginalized SGM subgroups have more posttraumatic stress symptoms. Interventions for SGM people should consider minority stress coping strategies and substance use comorbidities
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From Treatment to Healing: Inquiry and Response to Recent and Past Trauma in Adult Health Care.
Cost-Effectiveness of Automated Telephone Self-Management Support With Nurse Care Management Among Patients With Diabetes
PURPOSE This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of an automated telephone self-management support with nurse care management (ATSM) intervention for patients with type 2 diabetes, which was tested among patients receiving primary care in publicly funded (safety net) clinics, focusing on non-English speakers
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