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Intersectional disparities in outpatient alcohol treatment completion by gender and race and ethnicity
Delk, J., Bensley, K., Ye, Y., Subbaraman, M. S., Phillips, A. Z., Karriker-Jaffe, K. J., & Mulia, N. (2024). Intersectional disparities in outpatient alcohol treatment completion by gender and race and ethnicity. Alcohol Clinical & Experimental Research, 48(2), 389-399. https://doi.org/10.1111/acer.15243
BACKGROUND: Untreated alcohol use disorder (AUD) can have negative outcomes, including premature death. Completing specialty treatment for AUD can improve economic and educational outcomes. However, there are large racial and ethnic disparities in treatment completion, and how these disparities vary intersectionally (e.g., by gender and race and ethnicity) is unknown. Recent studies suggest that not using an intersectional approach can mask important disparities. We estimated disparities in AUD nonintensive outpatient treatment completion by gender alone, race and ethnicity alone, and intersectionally in a gender-by-race-and-ethnicity model. Accurately quantifying treatment completion disparities is critical not only for understanding healthcare disparities but reducing them to advance health equity.
METHODS: Data are from SAMHSA's 2017 to 2019 Treatment Episode Dataset-Discharges for adults aged 18+ who entered nonintensive outpatient treatment primarily for alcohol (n = 559,447 episodes; 30.3% women; 63.7% White, 18.0% Black, 14.4% Hispanic/Latinx, 2.1% American Indian/Alaska Native [AIAN], 1.0% Asian/Pacific Islander). Using the rank-and-replace method, treatment completion disparities were estimated by gender, race and ethnicity, and gender-by-race-and-ethnicity due to any reason other than differences in need for treatment, consistent with the Institute of Medicine's definition of a healthcare disparity.
RESULTS: The intersectional gender-by-race-and-ethnicity model identified the widest range of disparities among all models tested. Using this model, the largest disparities were identified for minoritized women's treatment episodes. Compared to White men whose completion rate was 60.79% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 60.06, 60.98), Black, Hispanic/Latina, AIAN, and Asian-American/Pacific Islander women had treatment episode completion rates that were 12.35 (CI: 12.33, 12.37), 9.08 (CI: 9.06, 9.11), 10.27 (CI: 10.22, 10.32), and 4.87 (CI: 4.78, 4.95) percentage points lower, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: In the United States, treatment completion rates for non-intensive outpatient alcohol treatment episodes are significantly lower for minoritized women than White men. The extent of the disparity is not apparent in univariate models, highlighting the importance of an intersectional approach to understanding disparities in the completion of non-intensive outpatient treatment for AUD.