January 28, 2024
1 min read

An engaging presentation on day two of STS 2024 focused on how socioeconomic disadvantage is associated with inferior patient survival following heart transplantation, while closely examining how future efforts and national policy changes are needed to improve longitudinal follow-up care and address systemic barriers to necessary healthcare. 

"Sara Sakowitz, MS, MPH at STS 2024"
Sara Sakowitz, MS, MPH, examines how socioeconomic disadvantage is associated with inferior patient survival following heart transplantation at STS 2024. 

“Hospital Volume Does Not Mitigate the Effect of Community Socioeconomic Deprivation on Outcomes of Heart Transplantation” was given as part of the J. Maxwell Chamberlain Memorial Papers Perioperative and Critical Care Surgery session. 

Sara Sakowitz, MS, MPH, from UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, reported on the independent association between neighborhood area deprivation and survival following heart transplantation, showing that patients who live in socioeconomically deprived communities demonstrate inferior long-term outcomes.
 
“These disparities were not mitigated by receiving care at high-volume heart transplantation centers and have persisted over the last two decades,” said Ms. Sakowitz. “Our study findings underscore the need to improve access to and engagement with longitudinal follow-up care, remove barriers to medication and appointment non-adherence, and directly address the underlying and systemic root causes of community-level inequities in transplant outcomes.“

This talk demonstrated the need for a team-based, collaborative approach to solve the issue. Clinicians and hospitals should consider implementing certain programs for their own communities – including expanded patient navigator services, social support groups, and clinical pharmacy services.