Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSIResearch InformaticsREDCap

The pursuit of health equity in digital transformation, health informatics, and the cardiovascular learning healthcare system. Am Heart J Plus 2022 May;17:100160

Date

06/29/2022

Pubmed ID

38559893

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10978355

DOI

10.1016/j.ahjo.2022.100160

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85153861751 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   12 Citations

Abstract

African Americans have a higher rate of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and a lower rate of specialty consultation and treatment than Caucasians. These disparities also exist in the care and treatment of chemotherapy-related cardiovascular complications. African Americans suffer from cardiotoxicity at a higher rate than Caucasians and are underrepresented in clinical trials aimed at preventing cardiovascular injury associated with cancer therapies. To eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in the prevention of cardiotoxicity, an interdisciplinary and innovative approach will be required. Diverse forms of digital transformation leveraging health informatics have the potential to contribute to health equity if they are implemented carefully and thoughtfully in collaboration with minority communities. A learning healthcare system can serve as a model for developing, deploying, and disseminating interventions to minimize health inequities and maximize beneficial impact.

Author List

Brown SA, Hudson C, Hamid A, Berman G, Echefu G, Lee K, Lamberg M, Olson J

Author

Jessica Olson PhD Director, Associate Professor in the Institute for Health and Humanity department at Medical College of Wisconsin