JAMA Netw Open. 2025 Jun 2;8(6):e2512397. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.12397.
ABSTRACT
IMPORTANCE: Patients from socially disadvantaged backgrounds experience disproportionately worse health care outcomes. Nurses provide most care to patients in hospitals and are informants of health care quality and equity.
OBJECTIVE: To understand what hospital nurses say helps or hinders their ability to provide quality care to socially disadvantaged populations.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative study involved a directed content analysis of open-text responses from the RN4CAST-NY/IL survey, which was conducted between April and June 2021. Participants were registered nurses licensed to work in 58 New York and Illinois hospitals identified as high-performing (25 hospitals) and low-performing (33 hospitals) for COVID-19 mortality outcomes in 2021 from a larger quantitative study. The Social Ecological Model informed the study codebook; inductive and deductive coding of the data and content analysis were conducted from March to October 2024.
EXPOSURE: Direct care hospital nurses who participated in the RN4CAST-NY/IL survey.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Open-text responses were from nurses who answered the survey question, “What helps (or hinders) your ability to provide quality care to vulnerable populations? (e.g. low SES, housing insecurity/homeless, racial/ethnic minorities, immigrant, limited English proficiency)?”
RESULTS: A total of 1084 nurses (mean [SD] age, 47.1 [18.2] years) responded to the survey. Most respondents identified as female (986 respondents [91.0%]) and were staff or direct care nurses (765 respondents [70.6%]) with at least a bachelor’s degree (968 respondents [89.6%]). With regard to race and ethnicity, 127 respondents (11.8%) were Asian, 156 (14.5%) were Black or African American, 89 (8.3%) were Hispanic, 693 (64.2%) were White, and 97 (8.9%) were other races. They had a mean (SD) of 18.9 (14.0) years of experience. Six themes described what helped or hindered quality care: (1) profits over patients, (2) care continuity and hospital-community partnerships, (3) insufficient staffing and time constraints, (4) technology to address language barriers, (5) patients’ determinants of health, and (6) individual nurses’ beliefs and backgrounds. Nurses proposed improving health care workforce diversity, strengthening community resources for patients, and advancing tailored cultural competency education as solutions to improve care for socially disadvantaged patients.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this qualitative study and directed content analysis of 1084 open-text responses, nurses identified systemic, institutional, community, and individual clinician-level approaches to improve care for socially disadvantaged populations for equitable care delivery. Nurses’ direct care experiences can inform hospital strategies to improve care for this population.
PMID:40478576 | DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.12397