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13-11-2024 | Bariatric Surgery | 2024 SAGES Oral

The impact of social determinants of health (SDOH) on completing bariatric surgery at a single academic institution

Authors: Sabrena F. Noria, Keeley J. Pratt, Mahmoud Abdel-Rasoul, Kayla Diaz, Bayan Shalash, Daniel Abul-Khoudoud, Bradley Needleman, Maximiliano Magallanes

Published in: Surgical Endoscopy | Issue 2/2025

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Abstract

Background

Underutilization of bariatric surgery is multifactorial. This study aimed to understand the association of SDOH on not achieving surgery.

Methods

1081 applications for primary MBS from January-December 2021 were stratified into those that completed surgery (COM; n = 415), in progress > 1-year (IP; n = 107), dropped out (DO; n = 379), and never started (NS; n = 180).
Using the American-Community-Survey results (2015–2020) and patient zip-codes, population differences in 4-domains of SDOH (demographic/social/housing/economic) were examined between COM versus the other groups. Additionally, using institutional MBSAQIP and EMR data, patient-specific differences in comorbidities were evaluated for COM versus IP/DO.
Univariate analysis using Kruskal–Wallis, chi-squared/Fisher’s exact tests were used for continuous and/or categorical variables. For patient-level analysis multinomial logistic regression was used to determine predictors of not achieving surgery. Hypothesis testing was conducted at an overall 5 percent type-I error rate (alpha = 0.05) and Bonferroni’s method was used to adjust for multiple comparisons.

Results

Compared to COM, IP-patients resided in zip-codes characterized by fewer married people (43% vs 46%; p = 0.019), lower education levels (49% vs 43%; p = 0.048), more households where rent was > 50% of household income (10% vs 8%, p = 0.002), and households below the poverty line (17.6% vs 14.5%, p = 0.017). At the patient-level, IP were more likely to be male (27.9% vs 14.9%; p = 0.014), publicly insured (44.9% vs 28.4%; p = 0.004), Black (35.5% vs 22.2%; p = 0.006), an active smoker (8.9% vs 2.2%; p = 0.018), have a higher BMI (49.6 vs 47.6; p = 0.01), and coronary intervention (5.8% vs 1.7%, p = 0.034). Comparison of COM vs DO was similar for both phases.
Multinomial multivariable logistic regression demonstrated higher BMI (OR = 1.03,[CI]:1.01–1.05, p = 0.001), males (OR = 1.9,[CI]:1.09–3.32, p = 0.024), smoking (OR = 4.58,[CI]:1.74–12.02, p = 0.002), and Medicaid (OR = 2.16,[CI]:1.33–3.49, p = 0.002) independently predicted not achieving surgery.

Conclusion

Patient-level data demonstrated social not clinical factors predicted surgery completion. Given zip-codes characterizing the IP/DO groups had a greater prevalence of social risk, more attention needs to be directed patient-level social risks.
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Metadata
Title
The impact of social determinants of health (SDOH) on completing bariatric surgery at a single academic institution
Authors
Sabrena F. Noria
Keeley J. Pratt
Mahmoud Abdel-Rasoul
Kayla Diaz
Bayan Shalash
Daniel Abul-Khoudoud
Bradley Needleman
Maximiliano Magallanes
Publication date
13-11-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Surgical Endoscopy / Issue 2/2025
Print ISSN: 0930-2794
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-024-11364-y
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