BACKGROUND: Social determinants of health (SDOH) complicate medical care and affect clinical outcomes, but the lack of a reliable structured interview for medical patients has impeded clinical assessment and research on SDOH. We assessed the reliability and validity of a newly developed SDOH Patient Interview Form and investigated SDOH in patients with heart failure. METHODS: The SDOH Patient Interview Form was administered to recently hospitalized patients with heart failure between January 2021 and April 2024. The interviews were recorded, and 50 were randomly selected for the interrater reliability analysis. RESULTS: The sample included 367 participants (mean age, 61.2±12.1 years
42.5% women
57.7% minorities). The interrater reliability of SDOH Patient Interview Form categories (eg, Legal and Social Problems) was 100%. The κ reliability coefficients for individual items were ≥0.94. Higher lifetime SDOH counts were associated with lower age and income and higher New York Heart Association class and body mass index. Two distinct sets of problems were found to contribute to relatively high burdens of SDOH. The first originates with abuse in childhood and presents as severe socioeconomic deprivation in adulthood. The second includes losses of family members and occupational, financial, and caregiver stress along with difficulty affording medical care. CONCLUSIONS: The SDOH Patient Interview Form is a reliable instrument for assessing patient-reported SDOH in patients with heart failure. It is suitable for use in research and clinical contexts but requires further testing in other medical patient populations. This study revealed 2 distinct patterns of stressful problems that can contribute to a high overall burden of SDOH. REGISTRATION: URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov
Unique identifier: NCT04637776.