Travel distance and Spanish-speaking are associated with delays in the treatment of cleft palate Journal Article


Authors: Stanton, E. W.; Rochlin, D.; Lorenz, H. P.; Sheckter, C. C.
Article Title: Travel distance and Spanish-speaking are associated with delays in the treatment of cleft palate
Abstract: Objective: Delayed repair of cleft palate is associated with worse speech outcomes. Social determinants of health may influence the timing of surgery; however, there are no population health investigations to evaluate factors such as travel distance, language barriers, and payer. This study sought to identify factors that may interfere with timely cleft palate repair. Design: Retrospective cohort. Setting: National/multi-center. Patients/Participants: All cleft palate repairs within California were extracted from 2000–2021. Main Outcomes Measures: The primary outcome was age at surgical repair, which was modeled with linear regression. Covariates included race, primary language, distance from patient home to hospital, socioeconomic status, primary payer, and managed care enrollment status. Results: 11 260 patients underwent surgical repair of a cleft palate. Black race was associated with delayed repair (22 additional days, P =.004, 95% CI 67.00–37.7) along with Asian/Pacific-Islander race (11 additional days, P =.006, 95% CI 3.26-18.9) compared to white race. Spanish-speaking patients had significantly later cleft palate repairs by 19 days, (P <.001, 95% CI 10.8-27.7) compared with English-speaking. Further distances from the hospital were significantly associated with later cleft surgeries with out-of-state patients undergoing surgery 52 days later (P <.001, 95% CI 11.3-24.3). Managed care plans and Medi-Cal were significantly associated with earlier surgical repair compared with private insurance. Conclusion: Black, Asian Pacific Islander, and Spanish-speaking patients and greater distance traveled to hospital were associated with delayed cleft palate repairs. These results underscore the importance of addressing structural and social barriers to care to improve outcomes and reduce health disparities for patients with cleft palate.
Keywords: prospective studies; confidence intervals; language; socioeconomic factors; travel; descriptive statistics; funding source; retrospective design; linear regression; health services accessibility; california; multicenter studies; geographic factors; managed care programs; record review; social determinants of health; race factors; spanish language; treatment delay psychosocial factors; cleft palate surgery; human california
Journal Title: Cleft Palate Craniofacial Journal
Volume: 62
Issue: 8
ISSN: 1055-6656
Publisher: American Cleft Palate Association  
Date Published: 2025-08-01
Start Page: 1402
End Page: 1409
DOI: 10.1177/10556656241256923
PROVIDER: EBSCOhost
PROVIDER: cinahl
PUBMED: 38774926
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Cinahl
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  1. Danielle Helena Rochlin
    24 Rochlin