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Community design of the Brooklyn Health Equity Index

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Abstract Health equity drives quality care. Few reliable metrics that capture patients’ perceptions of health equity exist. We report on the development of a patient-centered metric for health systems change in central Brooklyn, which stands out as an outlier in New York City with a disproportionate burden of poverty, disease, and death. A community-engaged, sequential, mixed-methods research design was used. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 80 community and health care stakeholders across central Brooklyn. Candidate items were derived from qualitative themes and examined for face, interpretive validity, and language. Interitem reliability and confirmatory factor analysis was assessed using data collected via text and automated discharge calls among 368 patients from a local hospital. Qualitative data analysis informed the content of 11 draft questions covering 3 broad domains: trust-building, provider appreciation of social determinants of health, and experiences of discrimination. Psychometric testing resulted in a Cronbach's alpha of 0.774 and led to deletion of 1 item, resulting in a 10-item Brooklyn Health Equity Index (BKHI). The 10-item BKHI is a novel, brief, and reliable measure that captures patients’ perceptions of inequities and offers a real-time measure for health systems and payors to monitor progress toward advancing health equity.
Title: Community design of the Brooklyn Health Equity Index
Description:
Abstract Health equity drives quality care.
Few reliable metrics that capture patients’ perceptions of health equity exist.
We report on the development of a patient-centered metric for health systems change in central Brooklyn, which stands out as an outlier in New York City with a disproportionate burden of poverty, disease, and death.
A community-engaged, sequential, mixed-methods research design was used.
Qualitative interviews were conducted with 80 community and health care stakeholders across central Brooklyn.
Candidate items were derived from qualitative themes and examined for face, interpretive validity, and language.
Interitem reliability and confirmatory factor analysis was assessed using data collected via text and automated discharge calls among 368 patients from a local hospital.
Qualitative data analysis informed the content of 11 draft questions covering 3 broad domains: trust-building, provider appreciation of social determinants of health, and experiences of discrimination.
Psychometric testing resulted in a Cronbach's alpha of 0.
774 and led to deletion of 1 item, resulting in a 10-item Brooklyn Health Equity Index (BKHI).
The 10-item BKHI is a novel, brief, and reliable measure that captures patients’ perceptions of inequities and offers a real-time measure for health systems and payors to monitor progress toward advancing health equity.

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