Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice

Abstract Background There is growing consensus on the importance of identifying age-related inequities in the receipt of public health and healthcare interventions, but concerns regarding conceptual and methodological rigour in this area of research. Establishing age inequity in receipt requires evi...

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Main Authors: Sarah M. Salway, Nick Payne, Melanie Rimmer, Stefanie Buckner, Hannah Jordan, Jean Adams, Kate Walters, Sarah L. Sowden, Lynne Forrest, Linda Sharp, Mira Hidajat, Martin White, Yoav Ben-Shlomo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-07-01
Series:International Journal for Equity in Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0605-z
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spelling doaj-b39fdde239474b40a231dfc6ec562a532020-11-25T02:20:28ZengBMCInternational Journal for Equity in Health1475-92762017-07-0116111010.1186/s12939-017-0605-zIdentifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practiceSarah M. Salway0Nick Payne1Melanie Rimmer2Stefanie Buckner3Hannah Jordan4Jean Adams5Kate Walters6Sarah L. Sowden7Lynne Forrest8Linda Sharp9Mira Hidajat10Martin White11Yoav Ben-Shlomo12School of Health & Related Research, University of SheffieldSchool of Health & Related Research, University of SheffieldSchool of Health & Related Research, University of SheffieldDepartment of Public Health and Primary Care, University of CambridgeSchool of Health & Related Research, University of SheffieldMRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge, School of Clinical MedicineCentre for Ageing & Population Studies, Department of Primary Care & Population Health, University College LondonInstitute of Health and Society, Newcastle UniversityAdministrative Data Research Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh BioquarterInstitute of Health and Society, Newcastle UniversitySchool of Social and Community Medicine, University of BristolMRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge, School of Clinical MedicineSchool of Social and Community Medicine, University of BristolAbstract Background There is growing consensus on the importance of identifying age-related inequities in the receipt of public health and healthcare interventions, but concerns regarding conceptual and methodological rigour in this area of research. Establishing age inequity in receipt requires evidence of a difference that is not an artefact of poor measurement of need or receipt; is not warranted on the grounds of patient preference or clinical safety; and is judged to be unfair. Method A systematic, thematic literature review was undertaken with the objective of characterising recent research approaches. Studies were eligible if the population was in a country within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and analyses included an explicit focus on age-related patterns of healthcare receipt including those 60 years or older. A structured extraction template was applied. Extracted material was synthesised in thematic memos. A set of categorical codes were then defined and applied to produce summary counts across key dimensions. This process was iterative to allow reconciliation of discrepancies and ensure reliability. Results Forty nine studies met the eligibility criteria. A wide variety of concepts, terms and methodologies were used across these studies. Thirty five studies employed multivariable techniques to produce adjusted receipt-need ratios, though few clearly articulated their rationale, indicating the need for great conceptual clarity. Eighteen studies made reference to patient preference as a relevant consideration, but just one incorporated any kind of adjustment for this factor. Twenty five studies discussed effectiveness among older adults, with fourteen raising the possibility of differential effectiveness, and one differential cost-effectiveness, by age. Just three studies made explicit reference to the ethical nature of healthcare resource allocation by age. While many authors presented suitably cautious conclusions, some appeared to over-stretch their findings concluding that observed differences were ‘inequitable’. Limitations include possible biases in the retrieved material due to inconsistent database indexing and a focus on OECD country populations and studies with English titles. Conclusions Caution is needed among clinicians and other evidence-users in accepting claims of healthcare ‘ageism’ in some published papers. Principles for improved research practice are proposed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0605-zEquityDisparityAgeismMethodologyHealthcare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah M. Salway
Nick Payne
Melanie Rimmer
Stefanie Buckner
Hannah Jordan
Jean Adams
Kate Walters
Sarah L. Sowden
Lynne Forrest
Linda Sharp
Mira Hidajat
Martin White
Yoav Ben-Shlomo
spellingShingle Sarah M. Salway
Nick Payne
Melanie Rimmer
Stefanie Buckner
Hannah Jordan
Jean Adams
Kate Walters
Sarah L. Sowden
Lynne Forrest
Linda Sharp
Mira Hidajat
Martin White
Yoav Ben-Shlomo
Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
International Journal for Equity in Health
Equity
Disparity
Ageism
Methodology
Healthcare
author_facet Sarah M. Salway
Nick Payne
Melanie Rimmer
Stefanie Buckner
Hannah Jordan
Jean Adams
Kate Walters
Sarah L. Sowden
Lynne Forrest
Linda Sharp
Mira Hidajat
Martin White
Yoav Ben-Shlomo
author_sort Sarah M. Salway
title Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
title_short Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
title_full Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
title_fullStr Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
title_full_unstemmed Identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
title_sort identifying inequitable healthcare in older people: systematic review of current research practice
publisher BMC
series International Journal for Equity in Health
issn 1475-9276
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Background There is growing consensus on the importance of identifying age-related inequities in the receipt of public health and healthcare interventions, but concerns regarding conceptual and methodological rigour in this area of research. Establishing age inequity in receipt requires evidence of a difference that is not an artefact of poor measurement of need or receipt; is not warranted on the grounds of patient preference or clinical safety; and is judged to be unfair. Method A systematic, thematic literature review was undertaken with the objective of characterising recent research approaches. Studies were eligible if the population was in a country within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and analyses included an explicit focus on age-related patterns of healthcare receipt including those 60 years or older. A structured extraction template was applied. Extracted material was synthesised in thematic memos. A set of categorical codes were then defined and applied to produce summary counts across key dimensions. This process was iterative to allow reconciliation of discrepancies and ensure reliability. Results Forty nine studies met the eligibility criteria. A wide variety of concepts, terms and methodologies were used across these studies. Thirty five studies employed multivariable techniques to produce adjusted receipt-need ratios, though few clearly articulated their rationale, indicating the need for great conceptual clarity. Eighteen studies made reference to patient preference as a relevant consideration, but just one incorporated any kind of adjustment for this factor. Twenty five studies discussed effectiveness among older adults, with fourteen raising the possibility of differential effectiveness, and one differential cost-effectiveness, by age. Just three studies made explicit reference to the ethical nature of healthcare resource allocation by age. While many authors presented suitably cautious conclusions, some appeared to over-stretch their findings concluding that observed differences were ‘inequitable’. Limitations include possible biases in the retrieved material due to inconsistent database indexing and a focus on OECD country populations and studies with English titles. Conclusions Caution is needed among clinicians and other evidence-users in accepting claims of healthcare ‘ageism’ in some published papers. Principles for improved research practice are proposed.
topic Equity
Disparity
Ageism
Methodology
Healthcare
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0605-z
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