Skip to main content

Burden of socio-legal concerns among vulnerable patients seeking cancer care services at an urban safety-net hospital: a cross-sectional survey

Abstract

Background

Social and economic conditions that affect one’s ability to satisfy life’s most basic needs such as lack of affordable housing, restricted access to education and employment, or inadequate income are increasingly well-documented barriers to optimal health. The burden of these challenges among vulnerable patients accessing cancer care services is unknown.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional survey of patients presenting for ambulatory cancer care services (screening and treatment) at an urban safety-net hospital to assess socio-legal concerns (social problems related to meeting life’s basic needs supported by public policy or programming and potentially remedied through legal advocacy/action).

Results

Among 104 respondents, 80 (77 %) reported concerns with one or more socio-legal needs in the past month, with a mean of 5.75 concerns per participant. The most common socio-legal concerns related to income supports, housing, and employment/education.

Conclusion

Our findings support the need for innovations in cancer care delivery to address socio-legal concerns of a vulnerable patient population.

Peer Review reports

Background

It is well-established that social environments of the poor and underserved negatively influence health [1, 2]. In particular, poor and underserved populations across the United States continue to bear a disproportionate burden of cancer, including higher incidence [3], advanced stage at diagnosis [4, 5], and higher mortality [3, 5, 6]. While the interplay of race/ethnicity, poverty and other socioeconomic indicators is complex, research clearly has documented the adverse impact that the social determinants of health can have on the ability to access and engage in timely and quality cancer care services [3, 79]. Despite state government (i.e., Massachusetts) attempts to offer uniform access to care, we still see persistent disparities which suggest that challenges are multifactorial and can originate outside the health care delivery setting. Indeed, a host of community-specific social, cultural, behavioral, and systems barriers to cancer care are commonly found among those living in poverty [5, 10]. These barriers are repeatedly found to affect health outcomes negatively for these populations [3, 11].

Federal and state laws in the United States have established a range of programs, services, and protections intended to address a host of socioeconomic vulnerabilities such as inadequate nutrition, unsafe and unaffordable housing, and insufficient income. Using this “social safety net”, qualified people may be eligible for a variety of health-promoting benefits and services [12]. Efforts by the health care delivery system to ensure adequate individual and population health are undermined when patients do not receive the protections or benefits that these laws afford them. Despite the existence of safety-net programs such as Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) [13], Section 8 housing subsidies [1417], and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) [18] (among many others), inconsistent program implementation coupled with complex bureaucratic requirements can result in unlawful denial of benefits and services, leading to preventable poor health outcomes [19, 20]. Landlords, school districts, and employers often fail to comply with a range of legal obligations they have to ensure, for example, non-discrimination in housing, education, and the workplace. The federal government has made recent attempts to address these social determinants of health in order to reduce disparities [2126]. Despite enthusiasm and focus on rethinking how to engage health care professionals in the social determinants of health [27], health care providers are not traditionally trained to identify or address health-affecting socio-legal concerns nor do they typically have appropriate resources available to them within their care team. This resource gap has become more pronounced in recent years as historically scarce social work resources are increasingly dedicated to mental health counseling rather than more traditional social work advocacy (i.e., food stamps, social support resources, arranging for additional resources) [28].

Medical-legal partnership (MLP) strategies were developed in the context of such needs. The MLP model first was implemented in 1993 to serve the pediatric population at Boston Medical Center. Lawyers were integrated into the health care team to address legal problems that affected the health of vulnerable inner-city children and their families [19]. As the model evolved, MLP efforts were targeted to five key domains of socio-legal concerns: Income Supports; Housing and Utilities; Education and Employment; Legal Status (immigration); and Personal and Family Stability and Safety [19]. Early successes in Boston triggered national expansion; [29] currently, 276 hospitals and health centers in 36 states and the District of Columbia incorporate medical-legal partnerships into their care for low-income patients [30]. We worked with Medical-Legal Partnership | Boston, the founding site of the national MLP Network, to conduct this study because of the program’s long history serving patient-families treated at Boston Medical Center.

To date, literature documenting the burden of socio-legal concerns exists mainly for pediatric populations [19, 3134]. The data relating to cancer patients is limited in that it (a) resides mainly in legal literature in the form of case studies [3537] or as program reports [31, 38, 39], (b) is qualitative in nature [35], and/or (c) does not target the most vulnerable subpopulations of cancer patients [19, 36, 3840]. A systematic effort to identify and understand socio-legal concerns within the cancer care patient population is critical to inform care delivery for those most at risk for poor cancer outcomes. The purpose of this study is to describe the prevalence of a range of socio-legal concerns in a diverse low-income population seeking cancer care services at an urban safety-net hospital.

Methods

The Boston University Institutional Review Board approved this cross-sectional study. We used a research-assistant administered questionnaire to measure the prevalence and nature of socio-legal concerns among patients seeking ambulatory cancer care services at an inner-city safety-net academic medical center from September 2010 to June 2011.

Socio-legal concerns

While the term “social determinants of health” is widespread in academic medical and public health literature, we sought to evaluate whether patients would report socioeconomic indicators that are potentially remediable under existing law and public policy, as this could be suggestive of a range of potential interventions depending on the findings. We defined the term socio-legal concerns as concerns about adverse socioeconomic conditions that have potential legal remedies residing in laws, regulations, or public policies [40, 41]. For example, a patient lacking enough food to eat may have been unlawfully denied government nutrition benefits—such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program—to which s/he was legally entitled. Here, the need for adequate nutrition required for good health becomes a socio-legal concern because this patient’s access to certain nutritional benefits is prescribed by law and can be enforced through legal advocacy. Our findings are limited to the prevalence of socio-legal concerns in a particular population; this study did not test a particular intervention. We use the phrase socio-legal concerns (as opposed to, for instance, legal concerns) for two reasons:

  1. (1)

    Socioeconomic conditions receptive to resolution exist on a continuum of acuity—what may present as a legal situation (e.g., a patient confronting an eviction notice that could potentially trigger homelessness) likely earlier existed in a less acute posture (e.g., that same patient being behind on his rent for several months).

  2. (2)

    Some socioeconomic hardships simultaneously trigger legal risks (e.g., eviction) and remedies enshrined in the law that can only be exercised through downstream engagement with court processes, or through upstream engagement with administrative agency bureaucracy(ies) (e.g., successful application for public benefits that boost income available for rent).

Across the broad spectrum of socioeconomic adversities with potential legal remedies, some material hardships lend themselves especially well to preventive (upstream) approaches that can, for example, keep lights and heat on before the risk escalates to service disconnection with attendant health implications. The authors’ preferred term, socio-legal concerns, reflects their recognition that social determinants of health can have complex trajectories, meaning that a range of responsive interventions could be implicated at different stages of that risk/problem/barrier life cycle.

Population studied

We included patients seeking care in three ambulatory cancer practice sites in one inner-city safety-net hospital, in order to capture the concerns of patients across the entire cancer care spectrum, from screening through diagnosis and treatment. Clinical sites included a breast specialty practice in which patients are referred for screening and diagnostic services, a medical oncology clinic, and a same-day surgery clinic for cancer patients in active treatment. Eligible participants were aged 18 or older and able to speak and read English. There were no restrictions on sex, ethnicity, primary language, insurance status, or type or stage of cancer. However, the sites where we recruited had a majority of female patients seeing breast cancer screening and treatment services.

Survey instrument

A survey was developed to identify socio-legal concerns that may act as barriers to cancer care [41]. The following three sources informed survey design: 1) a literature review on those social determinants of health observed among low-income cancer patients; [9, 12, 35, 37, 42, 43] 2) existing questions from instruments utilized by MLP | Boston [44] in 2009–10 to identify patients in need of legal help; and 3) a previously validated questionnaire used to identify families in need of legal help [10]. Questions were formulated to fit within five core socio-legal concern categories, reflected in the acronym I-HELPSM. Each category reflects basic needs and factors that affect health and are amenable to direct intervention, including: Income Supports, Housing and Utilities, Education/Employment, Legal Status, and Personal and Family Stability and Safety [45]. A total of 24 questions were included across the five I-HELP categories, and participants were systematically asked “In the last month, have you been concerned about the following…” A “yes” response to one or more of these 24 questions was considered a positive response for the presences of a socio-legal concern. Survey instrument can be found as an Additional file 1.

Additional survey questions included: Health status using the single SF-12 question rating for health (excellent, good, fair, poor); [46] the reason for the participant’s medical visit along the cancer care continuum (screening, diagnosis, treatment related); and the short four-question version of Cohen, Kamarck & Mermelstein’s Perceived Stress Scale [38]. A 10-item Demographics section completed the survey. The survey was originally piloted with 15 individual patients and modified based on feedback and research group consensus.

Data collection

We enrolled a sample of consecutive eligible patients arriving for ambulatory visits. After permission from one of three providers (surgical oncologist, primary care physician and medical oncologist), research assistants approached patients in clinic waiting rooms or exam rooms before/during their scheduled appointments and invited them to participate. Those interested in participation gave verbal consent, and the survey was administered in a private location. Each question and the subsequent response options were read aloud. Responses were recorded directly by pen and paper onto the questionnaire by the research assistant (responses were subsequently entered into an Excel spreadsheet and transferred into SAS). Once the survey was complete, if any legal concerns were identified through the survey interaction, literature was provided with contact information of an appropriate person or agency.

Data analysis

Descriptive statistics were performed on patient demographics, health status, and socio-legal concerns using percentages for categorical factors, and mean (standard deviation), or median (interquartile range) for non-normally distributed continuous factors. Comparisons of the groups of participants reporting any socio-legal concerns and participants reporting no socio-legal concerns were conducted using chi-squared tests and t-tests for significance. We examined type of socio-legal concern by frequency and number of unique patients who responded positive to each specific concern. SAS v 9.0 was used to perform analysis [47].

Results

A total of 197 patients were screened for eligibility after arrival to a cancer care-related ambulatory clinic visit and 73 were found to be ineligible (non-English speaking status n = 46, or non-cancer-related reason for their visit n = 16). Among the 124 eligible patients invited to participate, a total of 104 participants completed the I-HELP survey (84 % response rate). Table 1 displays participant socio-demographic characteristics by participant socio-legal concern status. The mean age of all study participants was 49 years (range 18–85), 65 % were from racial or ethnic minority groups, 67 % had an education of high school or less, 43 % had an annual household income of less than $20,000, and 63 % were enrolled in public health insurance. Overall, 80 participants (77 %) reported concerns about one or more socio-legal need in the last month. Unadjusted chi-squared analyses revealed that those who reported one or more socio-legal concerns were more likely to be: Black, single, and low-income (p < .05). Participants with socio-legal concerns have higher stress on average as measured by the Perceived Stress Scale [38] (mean 9.40) compared to those with no legal concerns (mean 7.23, p < .004). See Table 1.

Table 1 Patient Characteristics by Socio-Legal Concern (N = 104)

Table 2 provides a detailed analysis of the individual responses to survey questions corresponding with the I-HELP categories. Overall, the top reported socio-legal concern was “having enough money to pay basic expenses” (53 %) followed by “concern with finances” (38 %). Among specific concerns with income supports and public benefits, nearly a third of participants report concerns with getting government benefits or disability benefits, paying for their prescriptions, or obtaining adequate health insurance coverage. Among housing concerns, cost of housing concerns dominated, followed closely by worries about housing conditions and safety in the home. Education concerns regarding participant’s children (29 %) were as commonly reported as concerns regarding the participants’ own employment (26 %).

Table 2 Number and frequency of socio-legal concerns amongst 104 participants reporting ≥ 1 social-legal concern within the last month (N = 460)

Only 28 of those with reported socio-legal concerns (35 %) responded that “yes” they had discussed the socio-legal concern with their health care providers. Among those respondents, only 16 (20 %) reported that they had support from legal services, patient advocacy, or social work to address them (not in table).

Table 3 displays the frequency of reported socio-legal concerns across the I-HELP categories overall and by unique participant. Among the 80 participants who reported concerns with one or more socio-legal concerns, a combined total of 460 socio-legal concerns were reported corresponding with a mean of 5.75 concerns per participant (range 1–17). Nearly all survey participants with socio-legal concerns (90 %) reported at least one concern related to income supports and public benefits, while two-thirds (66 %) reported concerns with housing, and 41 % reported concerns with their employment or their own (or their child’s) education. Fewer participants reported concern with legal status (immigration) (9 %) or personal/family stability and safety (19 %). Thirty-three participants (41 %) also reported other socio-legal concerns that did not fit into these categories, including such things as advanced directives (n = 26) and caring for elderly/disabled relatives (n = 12).

Table 3 Frequency of Reported Socio-Legal Concerns by I-HELP Categories (N = 460 unique concerns reported by N = 104 participants)

Discussion

This observational study is the first to provide a systematic assessment of the socio-legal concerns among a vulnerable population seeking care across the cancer care spectrum. Not only did we find a high percentage of patients reporting socio-legal concerns (77 %), but multiple socio-legal concerns were present, with a mean of 5.75 concerns per patient. The most common concerns reported are income-or housing-related which highlights the potential impact that material hardship may play among cancer patients living in poverty, even in the face of expanded access to health coverage. Also striking is that our findings suggest that socio-legal concerns are associated with a higher level of stress and these concerns are not being discussed with care providers. This represents a missed opportunity in terms of referral for advice and assistance, and the potential overall health care quality improvement such ancillary services may engender.

Assessing socio-legal concerns is an innovative way to quantify upstream social determinants of health [42], described as personal resources such as education and income and the social environments in which people live, work, study, and engage in recreational activities [12]. Woolf and Braveman describe how these contextual conditions influence people’s exposure to environmental risks and their personal health behaviors, vulnerability to illness, access to care, and ability to manage conditions at home [12, 42]. As the health equity movement begins to shed light on the significance of social determinants of health, there is growing evidence of basic needs going unmet where eligible people are not connected to legally-prescribed benefits and services [36]. While this can be traced to many factors, one potential modifiable variable is the prevalence of unlawful denials of benefits and services or failure to enforce existing laws. Understanding how or which of these barriers might culminate to create barriers to obtaining needed health care services and achieving health outcomes. Further research in the impact of the social determinants of health will be critical to understanding and potentially improving population health.

Our study findings are consistent with other findings ascertained using different methodologies. The most recent assessment of unmet legal needs by the American Bar Association concludes that low-income Americans typically have 2–3 civil legal needs in areas related to health, including housing, disability supports, family stability and safety, access to health coverage and access to disability accommodations in work and school [3037, 42]. Retkin et al. performed a cross-sectional study of 51 cancer patients, and 61 % reported two or more legal issues, including financial concerns, disability issues, health insurance, workplace issues or advanced care planning. Only 20 % reported that they had their needs addressed by a health care provider [31]. In a 2006 survey of a largely White population of 2,307 cancer survivors, 75 % of respondents said they had experienced one or more practical concerns, where that term was defined as: school issues, employment issues, debt, or insurance [39]. Another study utilizing focus group data from 50 cancer patients identified 30 legal issues and documented a significant impact on quality of life [35]. In 2010, the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network supported the conduct of a nationally representative sample of 1,011 adults who reported that they or their household member had a history of cancer. Half of those surveyed reported difficulty paying for health care costs, one-third had difficulty paying for basic life necessities, and 23 % delayed care because of costs [38]. Our study is the first to assess these types of concerns systematically among an ambulatory inner city safety-net population.

The high prevalence of income and housing concerns in this population [1] is especially troubling given the current economic environment, where the average income of Americans has been declining since 1999, while food insecurity, unaffordable housing costs and homelessness are increasing [4853]. This growing income and social mobility gap threatens to widen cancer disparities. If a patient is having trouble accessing a health-promoting public benefit to which s/he is entitled, this needs to be detected. Our data provide a new framework to capture the burden of socio-legal concerns for patients seeking cancer-related services across the entire cancer care continuum in a racially and ethnically diverse, low-income, safety-net population. Our findings suggest that these concerns are not routinely disclosed to health care providers and thus represent a missed opportunity for addressing a range of high-stakes needs. Using a systematic method to capture and potentially act on socio-legal concerns in a vulnerable patient population is an innovative method of improving health care delivery.

The call for reorientation of health care systems to the early identification of social determinants [27] is opening a new frontier in addressing the non-biological factors that profoundly influence health; [1, 27] proactively to identify and then meet the needs of individual cancer patients throughout their cancer journey. Our study findings suggest that innovations in care delivery to address these socio-legal concerns are warranted. Interventions underway that merit rigorous evaluation include patient navigation, oncology social work, and medical-legal partnership based in cancer care.

We note that in the last decade or so, there has been substantial growth in integration of legal advocates and attorneys as newer members of the cancer care team [36]. Many such programs are affiliated with the National Cancer Legal Services Network (convened by LegalHealth, a division of the New York Legal Assistance Group) and the national MLP network (convened by the National Center for Medical-Legal Partnership, based at George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health) [30, 31].

In recent years, more evidence is building for medical-legal partnerships across the health care spectrum. For example, Ryan, et al. [48] surveyed participants in a family medicine clinic for stress levels before and after receiving medical-legal services. This recent pilot study demonstrated that participants had overall 30 % less stress and a 41 % increase in sense of well-being after receiving care from a medical-legal partnership. These improvements in levels of stress and well-being are particularly relevant to our study given our finding of higher levels of stress in our participants who had socio-legal concerns. Overall, emerging evidence suggests that the presence of an MLP intervention in any health care setting holds promise as one approach to address concerns identified by our vulnerable patients seeking cancer services. Future evidence that identifies health related consequences due to socio-legal concerns can help to establish the impact of our findings.

Limitations

We recognize several limitations of our findings. 1) The inclusion of only English-speaking subjects limits the generalizability of our findings, yet doing so likely underestimates the true burden of socio-legal concerns, since non-English speaking patients are at even higher risk for living in poverty [54, 55]. Future work that includes multi-lingual speakers will be critical. 2) Our findings represent only patients seeking care at a single institution in Massachusetts, where health care reform leaves few without insurance and where housing costs in the Northeast may create a disproportionately high level of housing concerns than might not be reflected in other U.S. communities. One might reasonably expect that the type of socio-legal concerns present in a given community reflect the public policy and socioeconomic climate in that given community, so that these findings may not be a good guide to specific needs in another community. 3) Using a dichotomous response scale for the survey limits our ability to understand the continuum of socio-economic conditions. 4) By directly administering surveys, we were able to ensure completion of data in a low literacy population, but we also acknowledge this is at the expense of a social desirability bias. 5) There may also be a response bias in our population due to a possible over or under estimating of the burden of socio-legal concerns as we do not have knowledge of these concerns in individuals who did not enroll into the study. 6) This study is limited to a population of only females and a single cancer type (breast) without representation from individuals who are in active radiation treatment.

Conclusion

Social determinants of health often are a root cause of illness and are key to understanding health disparities. Some of these determinants can be addressed through existing law and public policy. The data presented here provide a new lens through which to evaluate, approach, and remedy cancer health disparities in our country. Among a vulnerable inner city population seeking cancer care services, we demonstrate a high prevalence of socio-legal concerns. Given these findings and the consensus that social determinants of health are difficult and costly to address, we must continue the investigation by evaluating the possible impact of interventions that address socio-legal concerns, including but not limited to medical-legal partnership [42].

Abbreviations

I-HELP, income supports, housing and utilities, education/employment, legal status, and personal; MLP, medical-legal partnership; SNAP, supplemental nutritional assistance program; SSI, supplemental security income

References

  1. Marmot M. Health in an unequal world: social circumstances, biology and disease. Lancet. 2006;368:2081–94.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  2. Gany F, Lee T, Ramirez J, et al. Do Our patients have enough to Eat?: food insecurity among urban Low-income cancer patients. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2014;25:1153–68.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  3. American Cancer Society. Cancer facts & figures 2012. 2012.

    Google Scholar 

  4. American Cancer Society. Cancer facts & figures for Hispanics. 2009.

    Google Scholar 

  5. American Cancer Society. Cancer facts & figures for African Americans 2011–2012. 2011.

    Google Scholar 

  6. Kohler BA, Ward E, McCarthy BJ, et al. Annual report to the nation on the status of cancer, 1975–2007, featuring tumors of the brain and other nervous system. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2011;103:714–36.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  7. Nelson A. Unequal treatment: confronting racial and ethnic disparities in health care. J Natl Med Assoc. 2002;94:666.

    PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  8. Peterson NB, Han J, Freund KM. Inadequate follow-up for abnormal Pap smears in an urban population. J Natl Med Assoc. 2003;95:825.

    PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  9. American Cancer Society. Cancer in the poor: a report to the nation, in society AC. Atlanta: American Cancer Society; 1989.

    Google Scholar 

  10. Keller D, Jones N, Savageau JA, et al. Development of a brief questionnaire to identify families in need of legal advocacy to improve child health. Ambul Pediatr. 2008;8:266–9.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Nelson AR, Smedley BD, Stith AY. Unequal treatment: confronting racial and ethnic disparities in health care (full printed version). Washington DC: National Academies Press; 2002.

    Google Scholar 

  12. Braveman P, Egerter S, Williams DR. The social determinants of health: coming of age. Annu Rev Public Health. 2011;32:381–98.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. Nguyen BT, Shuval K, Bertmann F, et al. The supplemental nutrition assistance program, food insecurity, dietary quality, and obesity among US adults. Annu Rev Public Health. 2015;105:e1–7.

    Google Scholar 

  14. Pollack CE, Thornton RLJ, DeLuca S. Targeting housing mobility vouchers to help families with children. JAMA Pediatr. 2014;168:695–6.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  15. Kessler RC, Duncan GJ, Gennetian LA, et al. Associations of housing mobility interventions for children in high-poverty neighborhoods with subsequent mental disorders during adolescence. JAMA. 2014;311:937–48.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  16. Sharfstein J, Sandel M, Kahn R, et al. Is child health at risk while families wait for housing vouchers? Am J Public Health. 2001;91:1191–2.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  17. Ludwig J, Sanbonmatsu L, Gennetian L, et al. Neighborhoods, obesity, and diabetes—a randomized social experiment. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:1509–19.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  18. Perrin JM, Ettner SL, McLaughlin TJ, et al. State variations in supplemental security income enrollment for children and adolescents. Am J Public Health. 1998;88:928–31.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  19. Zuckerman B, Sandel M, Lawton E, et al. Medical-legal partnerships: transforming health care. Lancet. 2008;372:1615–7.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  20. Cherayil M, Oliveira D, Sandel M, et al. Lawyers and doctors partner for healthy housing. Clearinghouse Rev. 2005;39:65.

    Google Scholar 

  21. Tipirneni R, Vickery KD, Ehlinger EP. Accountable communities for health: moving from providing accountable care to creating health. Ann Fam Med. 2015;13:367–9.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  22. Garg A, Jack B, Zuckerman B. Addressing the social determinants of health within the patient-centered medical home: lessons from pediatrics. Jama. 2013;309:2001–2.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Hacker K, Walker DK. Achieving population health in accountable care organizations. Am J Public Health. 2013;103:1163–7.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  24. Stoto MA. Population health in the Affordable Care Act era. 2013. AcademyHealth.

    Google Scholar 

  25. Robert SA, Booske BC. US opinions on health determinants and social policy as health policy. Am J Public Health. 2011;101:1655–63.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  26. Marmot MG, Bell R. Action on health disparities in the United States: commission on social determinants of health. Jama. 2009;301:1169–71.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  27. Behforouz HL, Drain PK, Rhatigan JJ. Rethinking the social history. N Engl J Med. 2014;371:1277–9.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  28. Allen R. The role of the social worker in adult mental health services. London: The College of Social Work; 2014.

    Google Scholar 

  29. Goldberg C: Boston Medical Center turns to lawyers for a cure. New York Times 20, 2001

  30. MLP Network, in Partnership NCfML (ed), 2012

  31. Retkin R, Brandfield J, Bacich C. Impact of legal interventions on cancer survivors. 2007. Legal Health.

    Google Scholar 

  32. Zuckerman B, Sandel M, Smith L, et al. Why pediatricians need lawyers to keep children healthy. Pediatrics. 2004;114:224–8.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  33. Zuckerman B, Lawton E, Morton S. From principle to practice: moving from human rights to legal rights to ensure child health. Arch Dis Child. 2007;92:100–1.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  34. Pettignano R, Caley SB, Bliss LR. Medical-legal partnership: impact on patients with sickle cell disease. Pediatrics. 2011;128:e1482–8.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  35. Zevon MA, Schwabish S, Donnelly JP, et al. Medically related legal needs and quality of life in cancer care. Cancer. 2007;109:2600–6.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. Fleishman SB, Retkin R, Brandfield J, et al. The attorney as the newest member of the cancer treatment team. J Clin Oncol. 2006;24:2123–6.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  37. Woolf SH, Dekker MM, Byrne FR, et al. Citizen-centered health promotion: building collaborations to facilitate healthy living. Am J Prev Med. 2011;40:S38–47.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  38. Cohen S, Kamarck T, Mermelstein R: A global measure of perceived stress. Journal of health and social behavior:385–396, 1983

  39. Rechis R, Boerner L, Nutt S, et al. How cancer has affected post-treatment survivors: a LIVESTRONG report. Austin: LIVESTRONG; 2010.

    Google Scholar 

  40. Sandel M, Hansen M, Kahn R, et al. Medical-legal partnerships: transforming primary care by addressing the legal needs of vulnerable populations. Health Aff. 2010;29:1697–705.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  41. The Washington State Civil Legal Needs Study: Executive Summary, in Washington State Supreme Court ToECJF (ed), 2003

  42. Woolf SH, Braveman P. Where health disparities begin: the role of social and economic determinants—and why current policies may make matters worse. Health Aff. 2011;30:1852–9.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  43. Link BG, Phelan J: Social conditions as fundamental causes of disease. Journal of health and social behavior:80–94, 1995

  44. History of the Medical Legal Partnership, in Partnership ML (ed), 2012

  45. Kenyon C, Sandel M, Silverstein M, et al. Revisiting the social history for child health. Pediatrics. 2007;120:e734–8.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  46. Gandek B, Ware JE, Aaronson NK, et al. Cross-validation of item selection and scoring for the SF-12 Health Survey in nine countries: results from the IQOLA Project. J Clin Epidemiol. 1998;51:1171–8.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  47. SAS Institute Inc. SI: The SAS system for Windows. Cary: SAS Institute Inc; 1996.

    Google Scholar 

  48. Ryan AM, Kutob RM, Suther E, et al. Pilot study of impact of medical-legal partnership services on patients' perceived stress and wellbeing. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2012;23:1536–46.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  49. DeNavas-Walt C: Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States (2005), DIANE Publishing, 2010

  50. Holben D. Position of the American Dietetic Association: food insecurity in the United States. J Am Diet Assoc. 2010;110:1368–77.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  51. A C-J, MP R, C G, et al.: Household food security in the United States in 2014, US Department of Agriculrture, Economic Research Service, 2015

  52. National Alliance to End Homelessness. The state of homelessness in America. 2015.

    Google Scholar 

  53. Schwartz AF. Housing policy in the United States. New York: Routledge; 2014.

    Google Scholar 

  54. Ku L, Waidmann T. How race/ethnicity, immigration status and language affect health insurance coverage, access to care and quality of care among the low-income population. 2003. Kaiser commission on Medicaid and the uninsured.

    Google Scholar 

  55. Kelley E, Moy E, Stryer D, et al. The national healthcare quality and disparities reports: an overview. Med Care. 2005;43:I-3–8.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Sarah Caron, Emily Suther and Sarah Reinstein for their help in preparing this manuscript.

Declarations

This manuscript adheres to STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology) guidelines.

Funding

The funding support for this study includes The Boston University Ignition Award, the Avon Foundation Safety Net funding (05-2015-25), Boston Medical Center Minority-Based Community Clinical Oncology Program (NCI 1U-10CA129519-01A1), and the Boston Medical Center Carter Disparities Fund.

Availability of data and materials

All data that can be shared is contained within the manuscript. No further data will be shared due to identifying and confidential data.

Authors’ contributions

Conception and design of this study: JR, TB, SM. Collection and assembly of data for this manuscript: JR, TB, SM, RGL, JS. Data analysis and interpretation: NK, TB, R GL, JS, CG, KF, KN, SM, JF, JR All authors contributed to the manuscript writing and final approval: NK, TB, RGL, JS, CG, KF, KN, SM, JF, JR.

Competing interests

The authors declare they have no competing interests.

Consent to publication

Those who participated in the study gave verbal consent, and the survey was administered in a private location.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

This study was approved by the Boston University Medical Center Institutional Review Board. The associated IRB number is H-29663.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Naomi Yu Ko.

Additional file

Additional file 1:

Survey Instrument. Copy of administered survey instrument to identify socio-legal concerns that may act as barriers to cancer care. Questions were formulated to fit within five core socio-legal concern categories: Income Supports, Housing and Utilities, Education/Employment, Legal Status, and Personal and Family Stability and Safety. A total of 25 questions were included across the five I-HELP categories. (PDF 180 kb)

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Ko, N.Y., Battaglia, T.A., Gupta-Lawrence, R. et al. Burden of socio-legal concerns among vulnerable patients seeking cancer care services at an urban safety-net hospital: a cross-sectional survey. BMC Health Serv Res 16, 196 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-016-1443-1

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-016-1443-1

Keywords