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Adverse Social Factors And All-Cause Mortality Among Male And Female Patients Receiving Care In The

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by The Good Doctor, Oct 7, 2020.

  1. The Good Doctor

    The Good Doctor Golden Member

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    This study was conducted to evaluate whether social factors are stronger determinants of health than is medical care. Researchers analyzed how elevating numbers of adverse social factors extracted from the electronic health records were associated with mortality across a one-year period for male and female patients from 293,872 patients in one region of the Veterans Health Administration. The data revealed that social factors were not correlated with mortality among women as they were among men, although women were more likely than men to have multiple adverse social factors. It was recorded that health care systems can better understand patient all-cause mortality and distinguish potential prevention efforts built around social determinants by using incorporating social factors data.

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