Logo

American Heart Association

  7
  0


Final ID: LBP22

Inequities in the Financial Toxicity of Post-Stroke Aphasia

Abstract Body: Introduction: Aphasia, a communication disorder often resulting from stroke, can have profound impacts on both health outcomes and financial well-being. While the physical and cognitive consequences of stroke are well-documented, the financial strain, or "financial toxicity," associated with managing chronic conditions like aphasia remains underexplored. Furthermore, financial toxicity is not experienced equally across racial and ethnic groups, with disparities driven by socioeconomic factors, access to healthcare, and structural inequities. This study compares the financial toxicity of people with aphasia (PWA) to those with stroke alone, examining differences across racial and ethnic groups to highlight disparities in economic burden.
Methods: This study utilized data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) collected between 2018 and 2021 to examine the financial toxicity of PWA compared to those with stroke only. Financial toxicity was assessed using self-reported income and wealth data from MEPS. Individual-level income and wealth values were calculated from the self-reported financial data to quantify the financial burden. Fixed effects regression models were employed to account for unobserved individual heterogeneity, controlling for time-invariant characteristics. Interaction terms were included in the models to capture the differential financial impacts of aphasia on Black and Hispanic individuals, compared to other racial and ethnic groups. The analysis examined both within-group and between-group differences in financial toxicity, highlighting potential racial and ethnic disparities among those affected by aphasia.
Results: About 18.71% (N=281) of respondents who reported having a stroke also had aphasia. After controlling for demographic, health, and household characteristics, PWA had 21% lower income and 7% lower wealth compared to stroke survivors without aphasia. Aphasia had a disparate impact on the income (-29%) and wealth (-24%) of Black stroke survivors. These findings were consistent across different model specifications, highlighting the robustness of the results indicating racial inequity in the financial toxicity of post-stroke aphasia.
Conclusion: This study showed the financial impact of post-stroke aphasia and the disparate burden among Black PWA. Findings highlight the need to address the financial ramifications of post-stroke morbidities such as aphasia among vulnerable populations.
  • Jacobs, Molly  ( University of Florida , Gainesville , Florida , United States )
  • Ellis, Charles  ( University of Florida , Gainesville , Florida , United States )
  • Author Disclosures:
    Molly Jacobs: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Charles Ellis: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Employee:University of Florida:Active (exists now) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):NIH:Active (exists now)
Meeting Info:
Session Info:

Late-Breaking Science Posters

Wednesday, 02/05/2025 , 07:00PM - 07:30PM

Poster Abstract Session

More abstracts on this topic:
The Brain-behaviour Mechanisms of Impaired Linguistic and Cognitive Function Impairments in Stroke Patients with Aphasia

Siqi Li, Yuan Zinan, Li Yuexiu, Liu Yang, Zhang Yumei

Assessing Health Literacy and the Role of Race and Social Determinants in Cardiac Patients.

Odigwe Celestine, Lakkis Nasser, Mayfield Hanna, Mulyala Rajasekhar, Riad Mariam, Malik Hajira, Ruiz Brent, Mulekar Madhuri, Malozzi Christopher, Omar Bassam

You have to be authorized to contact abstract author. Please, Login
Not Available

Readers' Comments

We encourage you to enter the discussion by posting your comments and questions below.

Presenters will be notified of your post so that they can respond as appropriate.

This discussion platform is provided to foster engagement, and simulate conversation and knowledge sharing.

 

You have to be authorized to post a comment. Please, Login or Signup.


   Rate this abstract  (Maximum characters: 500)