Chronic Illness and Care
Some examples of chronic illnesses
affecting women include diabetes,
obesity, stroke, heart disease,
hypertension, osteoporosis,
osteoarthritis, chronic pain, depression,
and HIV/AIDS. There are many others,
and they usually are long-lasting and
affect all aspects of a woman's life.
AHRQ researchers are seeking ways to
help women understand and manage their chronic conditions and achieve a
better quality of life.
Diabetes
- Report describes quality of care and
outcomes for women with diabetes.
This report, prepared by AHRQ and
the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, presents measures for
quality of care and outcomes for women
with diabetes. It highlights where the
American health care system excels with
regard to diabetes care and where the
greatest opportunities for improvement
lie. For example, women with diabetes
were less likely than women without
diabetes to have their blood pressure
controlled or to have had a dental visit
in the preceding 12 months. Among
younger women (64 or younger),
women with diabetes were significantly
more likely than women without
diabetes to have only public health
insurance. On the other hand, women
with diabetes were much more likely
than women without diabetes to have
received an annual flu vaccination and
to have ever received a vaccination for
pneumonia. Women with Diabetes:
Quality of Health Care, 2004-2005
(AHRQ Publication No. 08-0099)*
(Intramural).
- Analysis reveals that many women and
men with diabetes are not receiving
recommended care.
According to this analysis of 10 quality
of care measures—as defined by the
National Health Care Quality and
Disparities Reports—only 29 percent of
women and 34 percent of men with
diabetes receive the five care processes
recommended for people with diabetes:
regular blood sugar measurement,
regular eye exams, regular foot exams,
flu vaccination each year, and lipid
profile every 2 years. Avoidable
hospitalizations for diabetes
complications decrease as income and
education increase among women across
all racial and ethnic groups. Correa-de-Araujo, McDermott, and Moy, Women's Health Issues 16(2):56-65, 2006 (AHRQ
Publication No. 06-R043)*
(Intramural).
- Having a chronic disease like diabetes
may be a barrier to receipt of
recommended preventive care among
women.
Researchers used data from three
nationally representative surveys to
examine the quality of care received by
women with diabetes and the impact of
socioeconomic factors on receipt of
clinical preventive services and screening
for diabetes-related conditions. They
found that use of diabetes-specific
preventive care among women is low,
and that women aged 45 and younger
and those with low educational levels
were the least likely to receive
recommended services. Also, women
with diabetes were less likely than other
women to receive a Pap smear, and
those who were poor and minority were
less likely than more affluent and white
women to receive the pneumonia
vaccine. Owens, Beckles, Ho, et al., J
Women's Health 17(9):1415-1423, 2008
(AHRQ Publication No. 09-R018)*
(Intramural).
Mental/Behavioral Health
- Psychological distress may cause women
to delay getting regular medical care.
The stress of juggling work and family
roles may lead some women to delay or
skip regular preventive care, such as
routine physicals, mammograms, and
other screening tests. In this study of
9,166 women aged 18-49, over 13
percent of them reported experiencing
signs of psychological distress, including
feeling nervous, hopeless, restless,
fidgety, or depressed. These distressed
women were more likely to delay
getting health care than women who
did not have distress symptoms (27
percent vs. 22 percent, respectively).
Bonomi, Anderson, Reid, et al., Arch
Intern Med 169(18):1692-1697, 2009
(AHRQ grant HS10909).
- Nearly two-thirds of mothers with
depression do not receive adequate
treatment for their condition.
Nearly 10 percent of the 2,130 mothers
in this study reported experiencing
depression. More than one-third of those
with depression did not receive any
treatment for their condition, 27.3
percent received some treatment, and just
35 percent received adequate treatment
for depression. Mothers who received
treatment were more likely than other
mothers to be age 35 or older, white, and
have some college education, and they
were less likely to be in the paid
workforce. Surprisingly, more than 80
percent of mothers who did not receive
any treatment for their depression
reported having insurance. Witt, Keller,
Gottlieb, et al., J Behav Health Serv Res
2009 (AHRQ grants T32 HS00063,
T32 HS00083).
- Nearly half of homeless women are in
need of mental health services.
Researchers conducted face-to-face
interviews with 821 homeless women in
the Los Angeles area, and found that
nearly half of the women had a mental
distress score indicating the need for
further evaluation and possible clinical
intervention. Sixty-seven percent of the
women were black, 17 percent were
Hispanic, and 16 percent were white.
Black women reported the lowest overall
mental distress scores; nearly twice as
many white women as Hispanic or black
women reported childhood or recent
physical or sexual assault. Austin,
Andersen, and Gelberg, Women's Health
Issues 18:26-34, 2008 (AHRQ grant
HS08323).
- Dysthymia may be a barrier to use of
recommended HIV medications by
women.
Dysthymia—a chronic, low-level daily
depression that lasts at least 2 years—is
prevalent among women and minorities
with HIV and may be a barrier to their
use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). The feelings of hopelessness,
indecision, and mental inflexibility that
commonly occur in people with
dysthymia could reduce the likelihood
that they would be offered or accept
HAART, according to this study.
Researchers analyzed 1997 data on 1,982
adults with HIV; white men were the
most likely to receive HAART (69
percent), while Hispanic women (53
percent) and black women (55 percent)
were the least likely to receive this lifesaving
therapy. Turner and Fleishman, J
Gen Int Med 21:1235-1241, 2006
(AHRQ Publication No. 07-R021)*
(Intramural).
- Study reveals differences between male
and female providers in behavioral
counseling.
According to this study, female providers
are more likely than male providers to
counsel depressed patients about anxiety
and less likely to provide counseling on
alcohol or drug use. Also, female patients
are less likely than male patients to be
counseled by providers of either sex.
Male patients of male providers reported
the most counseling, and female patients
of female providers reported the least
counseling about alcohol or drug use.
Rates of depression diagnosis and care
were comparable regardless of the
provider's sex or whether the provider
and patient were of the same sex. Chan,
Bird, Weiss, et al., Women's Health Issues
16:122-132, 2006 (AHRQ grant
HS08349).
- Longitudinal study identifies patterns of
tobacco use among young women.
Researchers conducted a study of 443
Midwestern women who smoke,
beginning in 1980, with followup in
1987, 1993, and 1999. They identified
three subgroups among the women who
smoked daily: the first group (48
percent) worked full time, were heavy
smokers, and were generally happy. The
second group (19 percent) started
smoking casually in college and exercised
regularly. The third group (33 percent)
were mothers who smoked because they
were addicted and received a
psychological boost from smoking.
Identifying these groups may help in
tailoring smoking cessation interventions
and messages appropriate for reaching
them. Rose, Chassin, Presson, et al.,
Addiction 102(8):1310-1319, 2007
(AHRQ grant HS14178).
Other
- Women account for almost 90 percent
of all hospital stays for injuries related to
osteoporosis.
An estimated 10 million Americans
suffer from osteoporosis, and women are
four times as likely as men to be
diagnosed with the condition. In 2006,
the rate of hospitalization for an injury
related to osteoporosis was 149 stays per
100,000 population compared with 20
stays per 100,000 population for men—a
rate more than six times as high for
women as for men. See U.S.
Hospitalizations Involving Osteoporosis and
Injury, 2006, HCUP Statistical Brief No.
76; online at http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb76.jsp
(Intramural).
- Medicare reimbursement for bone
density scans varies by diagnosis codes
and Medicare carrier.
Researchers analyzed Medicare claims
data from 1999 to 2005 for a 5 percent
national sample of enrollees with part A
and part B coverage who were not in
HMOs to analyze denial of Medicare
coverage for bone density (DXA) scans.
They found that although Medicare
reimbursement for DXA is covered as
part of the "Welcome to Medicare" exam
and for certain indications (e.g.,
screening for estrogen-deficient women
and conditions that lead to bone loss),
DXA claims were denied from 5 to 43
percent of the time. Variations in
reimbursement were related to diagnosis
code submitted, place of service, local
Medicare carrier, and several other
factors. Curtis, Laster, Becker, et al., J
Clin Densitom 11(4):568-574, 2008
(AHRQ grant HS16956).
- Millions of women are treated for high
blood pressure each year.
According to an analysis of data from
AHRQ's Medical Expenditure Panel
Survey (MEPS), approximately 25
million women in the United States—
most older than 45—were treated for
high blood pressure in 2006, making it
the most common condition for which
women sought treatment that year. The
other most common conditions for
which women sought treatment that
year, by age group, included: for age 65
and older, hyperlipidemia, osteoarthritis,
heart disease, and chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD); ages 45-65, depression, COPD and asthma,
hyperlipidemia, and osteoarthritis; ages
30-44, depression, COPD and asthma,
female genital disorders, and bronchitis.
Go to http://meps.ahrq.gov/mepsweb/data_stats/MEPS_topics.jsp?topicid=18Z-1 (Intramural).
- Lupus involves higher health care costs
and leads to lower work productivity.
In this study of 812 individuals
diagnosed with systemic lupus
erythematosus (SLE), researchers found
that direct health care costs for each
person were $12,643, and their
employment rate dropped from 76.8
percent of individuals at the time of
diagnosis to 48.7 percent at study
enrollment. The majority of study
participants (92.6 percent) were female,
since lupus mostly affects women.
Panopalis, Yazdany, Gillis, et al.,
Arthritis Rheum 59(12):1788-1795,
2008 (AHRQ grant HS13893).
- Socioeconomic status is related to
physical and mental health outcomes of
women with lupus.
Researchers examined data on 957
patients with lupus to assess symptoms,
physical functioning, and signs of
depression, as well as neighborhood and
socioeconomic status (SES). The
majority of patients were female (91
percent) and white (66 percent). Three
factors were associated with increased disease activity: lower education level,
lower income level, and poverty status.
There was a significant association
between lower SES, worse functioning,
and increased depressive symptoms.
Patients who were poor and lived in
high poverty neighborhoods had a
depression rate of 76 percent, compared
with 32 percent for patients who were
not poor and did not live in high
poverty areas. Trupin, Tonner, Yazdany,
et al., J Rheumatol 35(9):1782-1788,
2008 (AHRQ grant HS13893).
- Mycobacterial pulmonary disease
affects more women than men.
Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM)
are an important cause of disease and
death, most often in the form of
progressive lung disease. Long thought
to be more common in men, this study
found that the epidemiology of this
disease has changed in the last several
decades, and it now affects women
more often than men. Of the 933
patients with NTM isolated by culture,
56 percent met the microbiologic
criteria for NTM disease. Pulmonary
cases predominated, and skin/soft tissue
infections were the second most
common form of NTM disease.
Cassidy, Hedberg, Saulson, et al., Clin
Infect Dis 49:e124-e129, 2009 (AHRQ
grant HS17552).
- Osteoporosis and low bone density
affect many postmenopausal women.
Although osteoporosis affects both
women and men, it occurs most often
in postmenopausal women. It increases
bone fragility and susceptibility to
fracture; each year in the United States,
about 1.5 million people experience a
fracture related to osteoporosis. These
three documents present information
about osteoporosis and low bone
density. Comparative Effectiveness of
Treatments to Prevent Fractures in Men
and Women with Low Bone Density or
Osteoporosis presents a review of the
evidence comparing the efficacy and
safety of agents used to treat low bone
density (AHRQ Publication No. 08-EHC008-1). Fracture Prevention
Treatments for Postmenopausal Women
with Osteoporosis: Clinician's Guide
presents information for doctors and
other providers on the effectiveness and
safety of various treatments for
preventing fractures in postmenopausal
women (AHRQ Publication No. 08-EHC008-3). Osteoporosis Treatments that
Help Prevent Broken Bones: A Guide for
Women After Menopause describes the
effectiveness, side effects, and costs of
the various treatments for low bone
density (AHRQ Publication 08-EHC008-2A).* These publications are
also available on the AHRQ Web site at
http://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/.
- Management of gout differs for women
and men.
About 5 million Americans suffer from
gout, a painful inflammation of the
joints. According to this study, factors
leading to gout, as well as its
management, are different in women
and men. Researchers examined data on
1.4 million members of seven managed
care plans from 1999 to 2003 and
identified 6,133 adult members with
gout. Women with gout were older than
men (mean age of 70 vs. 58), had a
greater number of coexisting medical
conditions, and received diuretics more
often (77 vs. 40 percent), respectively.
Harrold, Yood, Mikuls, et al., Ann
Rheum Dis 65:1368-1372, 2006
(AHRQ grants HS10391, HS10389).
- Young women of low to normal weight
with GI complaints should be screened
for eating disorders.
This study found that young men and
women (average age of 26) who were
hospitalized for an eating disorder were
three times as likely as other young
people to seek health care for
gastrointestinal problems during their
illness. Over 90 percent of the
individuals studied were women. Thus,
the researchers recommend that primary
care physicians and gastroenterologists
screen young women of low to normal
weight who present with GI complaints for possible eating disorders. Simple
questionnaires that address issues such
as body image, weight loss, and
vomiting can be used. Winstead and
Willard, J Clin Gastroenterol 40:678-682, 2006 (AHRQ grant HS13852).
- Checklists help women know which
medical tests are needed to stay healthy
at any age.
Two checklists from AHRQ show at a
glance what the U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force recommends for screening
tests and preventive services, as well as
what constitutes a healthy lifestyle and
healthy behaviors. Women: Stay Healthy
at Any Age is available in English
(AHRQ Publication No. 07-IP005-A)
and Spanish (AHRQ Publication No.
07-IP005-B). Women: Stay Healthy at
50+ is also available in English (AHRQ
Publication No. 08-IP001-A) and
Spanish (AHRQ Publication No. 08-IP001-B).* These publications are also
available online at http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/prevenix.htm (Intramural).
- Weight-loss surgery can lead to
dramatic weight loss, but it remains a
high-risk procedure.
In this commentary, AHRQ director
Carolyn Clancy, MD, discusses the pros
and cons of bariatric surgery for
women, including the necessary lifestyle
changes that must be made. She also
examines the important role of nurses in
helping women achieve success with
bariatric surgery. Clancy, Women's Health
12(1):21-24, 2008 (AHRQ Publication
No. 08-R061)* (Intramural).
- Women with HIV receive poorer
quality of care than men with HIV.
Critical health care services for women
infected with HIV continue to lag
behind services for men with HIV,
according to this study. Researchers
examined data on care provided to more
than 9,000 patients at HIV clinics and
found that women were less likely than
men to receive highly active
antiretroviral therapy (78 vs. 82 percent,
respectively) or prophylaxis for
pneumonia (65 vs. 75 percent,
respectively). They also were less likely
than men to have been assessed for their
hepatitis C virus status (87 vs. 88
percent, respectively). Hirschhorn,
McInnes, Landon, et al., Women's
Health Issues 16:104-112, 2006 (AHRQ
grants HS10227, HS10408).
Return to Contents
Health Impact of Violence Against Women
An estimated 1.5 million women are
physically abused by their intimate
partners each year, and about one of
every four women seeking care in
emergency rooms has injuries resulting
from domestic violence. There are many
consequences of domestic violence, as
reflected in the high use of health care
services by abused women. In addition
to physical injuries, women who are
victims of domestic violence experience
higher rates of depression, substance
abuse, suicidal thoughts, and suicide
attempts.
- Women who suffer abuse are more
likely than those who have never been
abused to use mental health services.
Researchers surveyed 3,333 women
aged 18 to 64 in the Pacific Northwest
and found that mental health service
use was highest when the physical or
emotional abuse was ongoing. However,
women who had experienced abuse
recently (within 5 years) or remotely
(more than 5 years ago) still accessed
mental health services at higher rates
than women who were never abused.
Women who were physically abused
also used more emergency, outpatient,
pharmacy, and specialty services.
Women who were experiencing ongoing
physical abuse had annual health care
costs that were 42 percent higher than
women who never suffered abuse.
Bonomi, Anderson, Rivara, and
Thompson, Health Serv Res 44(3):1-16,
2009 (AHRQ grant HS10909).
- Abused women are more likely to rely
on condoms than pills for birth
control.
A survey of 25 women in the Boston,
MA, area found that a high rate of
women who were victims of domestic
violence did not use any form of birth
control. Of the 115 women who
reported being abused in the past year,
17 percent did not use birth control,
compared with 11 percent of the
women who were not abused. Abused
women most often used condoms (33
percent) to prevent pregnancy, while
women who were not abused most
often used birth control pills (46
percent). Williams, Larsen, and
McCloskey, Violence Against Women
14(12):1382-1396, 2008 (AHRQ grant
HS11088).
- Duration and severity of domestic
abuse predict whether women will seek
medical and legal help.
Researchers in Seattle conducted phone
interviews with 1,509 women who said
they had experienced physical, sexual, or
psychological abuse since reaching the
age of 18. Those who were sexually or
physically abused were more likely to
seek medical care and legal assistance
than those who reported only
psychological abuse. The longer the
abuse had continued, the more likely
the woman was to seek help. Women
who were psychologically abused were
more inclined to seek legal assistance
rather than medical services. Duterte,
Bonomi, Kernic, et al., J Womens Health
17(1):85-95, 2008 (AHRQ grant
HS10909).
- Women who are victims of abuse have
worse health than other women, even
years after abuse has stopped.
Thirty-four percent of women surveyed
in a large health plan had suffered from
physical and/or sexual intimate partner
violence during their adult lifetime, and
it took an enormous toll on their health.
Their depression and physical
symptoms persisted for many years after the abuse had stopped, according to this
study. The researchers analyzed survey
results from 3,429 women who were
asked about their history of abuse and
their mental, social, and physical health.
Although 34 percent of the women had
suffered from sexual and/or physical
abuse, only 5 percent reported abuse
within the previous year. For the others,
it had been a median of 19 years since
the last episode of abuse. Bonomi,
Anderson, Rivara, and Thompson, J
Women's Health 16(7):987-997, 2007.
See also Rivara, Anderson, Fishman, et
al., Am J Prevent Med 32(2):89-96, 2007
(AHRQ grant HS10909)
- Hispanic women who are abused while
pregnant report high levels of stress.
Researchers surveyed 210 pregnant
Latinas in Los Angeles in 2003-2004 to
assess intimate partner violence, adverse
social behavior, post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), depression, and other
life situations. Nearly half (44 percent) of
the women reported abuse and high
levels of social undermining by their
partners (criticism, anger, insults) and
stress. Women who were abused were
more likely to be depressed (41.3
percent) or to have PTSD (16.3 percent)
compared with women who were not
abused (18.6 percent and 7.6 percent,
respectively). Rodriguez, Heilemann,
Fielder, et al., Ann Fam Med 6(1):44-52,
2008 (AHRQ grant HS11104).
- Women who were abused as children
use more health care than other women.
Researchers interviewed 3,333 women,
grouped the women into one of four
categories (no abuse, physical and sexual
abuse, physical abuse only, and sexual
abuse only), and examined the women's
health care use over a 10-year period
(1992-2002). Thirty-four percent of
women said they were abused as
children, and they were more likely to
have smoked, used recreational drugs in
the past year, have symptoms of
depression, and have a higher body mass
index than women who were not abused
as children. Health care costs for women with a history of physical and sexual
abuse were an average $800 higher
annually, compared with women who
were not abused ($3,203 vs. $2,413,
respectively). Bonomi, Anderson, Rivara,
et al., J Gen Intern Med 23(3):294-299,
2008 (AHRQ grant HS10909).
- Abused women describe partner
interference with health care.
Researchers examined responses from a
survey of 276 women at eight Boston
area clinics who had been physically
abused during the preceding year.
Seventeen percent of the women
reported that a partner had interfered
with their health care. Women who had
less than a high school education were
three times as likely as other women to
be victimized in this way. Also, women
born outside the United States and those
who visited the clinic with a man were
twice as likely as other women to have a
partner that interfered with their health
care. Partner interference nearly doubled
the odds of women having poor health.
McCloskey, Williams, Lichter, et al., J
Gen Int Med 22:1067-1072, 2007
(AHRQ grant HS11088).
- Location of shelters may increase risk of
violence against homeless women.
Researchers interviewed 974 homeless
women who visited 64 shelters and 38
meal programs serving homeless women
in eight regions of Los Angeles county
and screened them for substance abuse,
mental illness, and history of childhood
physical and sexual abuse. Results
showed that homeless women living in
or near skid row (crime ridden and
dilapidated neighborhoods) were nearly
twice as likely to be physically assaulted
as homeless women in other areas of the
city. The researchers conclude that
seeking safer locations for shelters and
other assistance programs could reduce
violence against homeless women.
Heslin, Robinson, Baker, and Gelberg, J
Health Care Poor Underserved 18:203-218, 2007 (AHRQ grant HS08323).
- Intimate partner violence can occur at
any age.
Domestic violence is generally thought to
be a problem only in younger women,
but this study found that it can happen
to women at any age. Researchers
surveyed 370 women aged 65 and older;
over 2 percent of the women reported
abuse within the previous year, and 3.5
percent reported being abused within the
previous 5 years. Half of the women
were aged 65 to 74, and half were aged
75 or older. Intimate partners included
spouses, nonmarital partners, and former
marital and nonmarital partners. About
18 percent of the women said they
suffered sexual or physical abuse, and 22
percent were victims of nonphysical
abuse, including being threatened, called
names, or having their behavior
controlled by their partner. Bonomi,
Anderson, Reid, et al., Gerontologist
47(1):34-41, 2007 (AHRQ grant
HS10909).
Return to Contents
Health Care Costs and Access to Care
Many changes have taken place over the
last 20 years in health care delivery and
how we pay for care in the United States.
The cost of care has continued its
upward climb, which has been
particularly steep in the last 5 to 10
years. In 2006, an estimated $1.03
trillion was paid for hospital inpatient
and outpatient care, emergency room
services, office-based medical provider
services, dental services, home health
care, prescription medicines, and other
medical services and equipment for
nearly 3 million individuals in the
United States. In 1997, total health care
expenditures were $553.2 billion; this
number increased to $1 trillion in 2006.
Access to care continues to be a problem
for many Americans, including women,
and access is a particular challenge for
those who lack health insurance, either
private insurance or public coverage. For
example, in 2006, about 68 million
people under age 65—or nearly 27 percent of the population—were
uninsured at some point during the year.
Costs
- Women who receive food stamps spend
more on health care and are more likely
to be overweight or obese.
Researchers analyzed State-level data on
food stamp program (FSP) characteristics
and Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
data to estimate the link between FSP
participation and weight and health care
expenditures of nonelderly adults. They
found that women who receive food
stamps are nearly 6 percent less likely to
be normal weight and nearly 7 percent
more likely to be obese as women who
do not receive food stamps. Also,
participation in the FSP leads women to
devote $94 extra per year to health care.
Meyerhoefer and Pylypchuk, Am J Agric
Econ 90(2):287-305, 2008 (AHRQ
Publication No. 08-R072)* (Intramural).
- The health costs of being a woman are
substantial.
Based on 3 years of data from the 2000-2002 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey,
more than one-fifth of women (21.2
percent) sought care for a female-specific
condition over a 1-year period, primarily
gynecologic disorders, pregnancy-related
conditions, and menopausal symptoms.
Women's health care costs were
substantial. For example, women spent
from a mean of $483 per year for
menopausal disorders to $3,896 for
female cancers. Overall, women spent an
estimated $108 billion a year for health
care, of which more than 40 percent was
for female-specific conditions. Kjerulff,
Frick, Rhoades, and Hollenbeck,
Women's Health Issues 17:13-21, 2007
(AHRQ Publication No. 07-R057)*
(Intramural).
- Researchers examine women's health
care costs and use of services.
This comprehensive review of U.S.
women's health care use and expenditures
shows that in 2000, 91 percent of adult
women used some form of health care
services. Overall, 82 percent of adult women had an outpatient care visit, and
11 percent were hospitalized. The mean
expense per woman was more than
$3,200 in 2000. Women with private
insurance and those on Medicaid were
more likely to use health services than
uninsured women, and white women
used any type of health service more
often and used more prescription drugs
than minority women and men. Nearly
30 percent of older women in fair or
poor health spent 10 percent or more of
their income for out-of-pocket medical
care in 2000. Taylor, Larson, and Correa-de-Araujo, Women's Health Issues
16(2):66-79, 2006 (AHRQ Publication
No. 06-R044)* (Intramural).
Access to Care
- Women are vulnerable to coverage and
care gaps when their husbands
transition to Medicare.
Some near-elderly women (aged 62 to
64) experience disruptions in their
insurance coverage as their husbands
turn 65 and transition to Medicare,
according to this study. Women whose
coverage was interrupted had a 71
percent increased probability of changing
their normal care provider or clinic, and
they were much more likely to delay
filling a prescription or take less
medication than prescribed because of
cost. Many women in this age group
have one or more chronic conditions,
and disjointed care could lead to adverse
consequences in this group. Schumacher,
Smith, Liou, and Pandhi, Health Serv Res
44(3):946-964, 2009 (AHRQ grant T32
HS00083).
- Women accounted for nearly 60 percent
of hospitalizations in 2007.
Almost 25 percent of the 23.2 million
hospital admissions of women in 2007
were for pregnancy and childbirth, and
nearly 10 percent were related to
cardiovascular disease—the number one
killer of women. Other leading causes of
hospitalization that year included
pneumonia, osteoarthritis, depression
and bipolar disorder, and urinary tract
infection. HCUP Facts and Figures, 2007. More information is available at
http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/factsandfigures/2007/TOC_2007.jsp
(Intramural).
- Problems in accessing care are common
among women with disabilities.
About 16 percent of adult women have
at least one functional limitation (e.g.,
difficulty lifting 10 pounds, standing for
20 minutes, using fingers to grasp
something, etc.); those with three or
more functional limitations are more
likely than other women to report being
unable to get medical and dental care,
according to this study. Women with
functional limitations who were age 65
or older were less likely to receive Pap
tests or mammograms, compared with
women who had no functional
limitations. They also were more likely
to report being unable to get
prescription medicines or eyeglasses,
regardless of age group. Researchers
compared demographic characteristics,
reported health measures, use of clinical
preventive services, and other factors.
Chevarley, Thierry, Gill, et al., Women's
Health Issues 16:297-312, 2006 (AHRQ
Publication No. 07-R037)*
(Intramural).
- Study characterizes women's preventive
health care visits.
Researchers analyzed data and interview
notes on 95 visits with adult females
who saw 47 different clinicians at 18
Midwestern family practices. They
found that the preventive services
delivered in more than half of visits
included blood pressure measurement,
weight assessment, breast and pelvic
exams, identification of smoking status
and related counseling, and
mammography recommendations. Key
issues addressed less often included
cholesterol screening, colon cancer
screening, alcohol use, and
recommended immunizations.
Clinicians were inconsistent in obesity
counseling. Backer, Gregory, Jaen, and
Crabtree, Fam Med 38(5):355-360,
2006 (AHRQ grant HS08776).
- Women living in rural areas receive
less preventive care than those residing
in urban areas.
Researchers examined differences in use
of preventive health services in four
types of counties: large metropolitan
counties, small metropolitan counties,
counties adjacent to metropolitan areas,
and rural counties (not adjacent to
metropolitan counties or with fewer
than 10,000 residents). They found that
rural women were less likely than urban
women to have had cholesterol tests,
dental exams, and mammograms during
the previous 2 years, but they were more
likely to have had their blood pressure
checked during the previous year. Rural
residents, on average, had lower incomes
and less education than their urban
counterparts, and they were more likely
to be uninsured and to face structural
barriers to care, such as long travel
times, than those living in urban areas.
Larson and Correa-de-Araujo, Women's
Health Issues 16(2):80-88, 2006 (AHRQ
Publication No. 06-R045)*
(Intramural).
- Clinic-and community-based
strategies can promote use of preventive
care by Latinas.
This study found that using
promotoras—lay health advisors
recruited from the community—and
professional interpreters could increase
the use of preventive services among
Hispanic women and their children.
Other strategies for promoting
preventive care among Latinas included
tagging the charts of at-risk patients,
using videos for in-clinic education, and
asking patients for updated contact
information at each clinic visit to
facilitate recall/reminder interventions.
Wasserman, Bender, and Lee, Med Care
Res Rev 64(1):4-45, 2007 (AHRQ grant
HS13864).
- Certain aspects of medical care are
critically important to female Somali
refugees newly arrived in the United
States.
In-depth interviews with resettled
Somali women in Rochester, NY, revealed differences in spoken language,
degree of acculturation, and literacy.
They described the elements of U.S.
primary care most important to them,
including ease of accessing the health
care system, availability of interpreters, a
trusting relationship with clinicians, and
the availability of female clinicians,
especially for gynecologic exams.
Carroll, Epstein, Fiscella, et al., Patient
Educ Counsel 66:337-345, 2007
(AHRQ grant HS14105).
Return to Contents
Health Care Quality and Safety
Finding ways to improve health care
quality and enhance patient safety has
become one of the most significant
challenges facing the American health
care system. AHRQ researchers are
seeking answers and developing tools to
improve the quality and safety of health
care for all Americans, including
women.
- Case study sets the stage for a
discussion of error disclosure in U.S.
hospitals.
A case of wrong-site surgery for skin
cancer serves as a framework for
discussion of medical error and its
disclosure to the patient by the surgeon
and the hospital. The author reviews the
state of error disclosure in U.S.
hospitals, summarizes the barriers to
disclosure and some possible solutions,
and discusses recent developments in
disclosure undertaken by Federal
agencies, universities, and national
quality organizations. Gallagher, Acad
Med 84(8):1135-1143, 2009 (AHRQ
grant HS16097).
- Use of electronic health records in labor
and delivery units can improve the
quality and safety of care.
Researchers examined 250 paper-based
and 250 electronic health record (EHR)
labor and delivery notes in a busy
university hospital labor and delivery
unit. They found that the paper-based
notes were substantially more likely to
be missing key clinical information
compared with the EHR. Information most likely to be missing included data
on contractions (10 percent for paper
vs. 2 percent for EHR), membrane
status (64 vs. 5 percent), bleeding (35
vs. 2 percent), and fetal movement (20
vs. 3 percent). When workflow was
examined, both computer-related and
direct patient care activities increased
significantly after EHR implementation.
Eden, Messina, Li, et al., Am J Obstet
Gynecol 199:307.e1-307.e9, 2008
(AHRQ grant HS15321).
- Study examines male-female disparities
in risk for workplace injury.
In this study of male-female and racial
disparities in individual workplace
injury and illness risk over time, white
men had the highest risk of injury
relative to other groups. But, among
women, black women had the highest
risk of injury. Environmental hazards
were associated with elevated injury risk,
but no association was found between
the level of physical demand and risk of
physical injury. Berdahl, Am J Public
Health (12):2258-2263, 2008 (AHRQ
Publication No. 09-R020)*
(Intramural).
- Content of physician visits differs for
women and men.
This study found that the content of
women's visits to primary care doctors
differs from that of men's visits in several
ways. For example, compared with
men's visits, women's visits involved
more discussion about the results of
treatments, more preventive services, less
emphasis on physical exams, and less
discussion about alcohol, tobacco, and
other drug use. Visit length was similar
for women and men. These findings are
based on previsit interviews and
videotaping of actual medical visits for
315 women and 194 men who were
cared for by 105 primary care
physicians. Bertakis and Azari, J Women's
Health 16(6):859-868, 2007 (AHRQ
grant HS06167).
- Women have fewer problems after
vascular surgery in VA hospitals than
in private hospitals.
Women's mortality rates 1 month after
vascular surgery at VA and private-sector
hospitals are similar, but they have fewer
postoperative problems in VA hospitals,
according to this study. Researchers
compared postoperative mortality and
morbidity for 458 women who had
vascular surgery at 128 VA hospitals and
3,535 women who had surgery at 14
private medical centers between 2001
and 2004. After adjusting for severity of
illness, 30-day mortality rates were
similar; however, there were pronounced
differences in postoperative problems
between the two groups, with the VA
group suffering from 40 percent fewer
postoperative complications than the
private group. The complications that
were more frequent in the private group
included deep wound infection,
respiratory failure, urinary tract
infection, cardiac arrest, and graft
failure. Johnson, Wittgen, Hutter, et al.,
J Am Coll Surg 204(6):1137-1146, 2007
(AHRQ grant HS11913).
- Quality of health care varies for older
women.
Women make up more than half (60
percent) of the Medicare population,
and they depend on the program for an
average of 15 years compared with 7
years for men. This study examined
quality of care for older women
compared with older men. It shows that
older white women tend to receive
better quality of care than their
Hispanic and black counterparts, and
more educated women often receive
better quality of care than less-educated
women. Also, older women are much
less likely than older men to receive a
number of preventive tests, have their
blood pressured under control, or
receive aspirin or a beta-blocker upon
hospital admission or discharge for heart
attack. Results are mixed for diabetes
care and vaccinations for flu and
pneumonia. Kosiak, Sangl, and Correa-de-Araujo, Women's Health Issues
16(2):89-99, 2006 (AHRQ Publication
No. 06-R046)* (Intramural).
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