Lopez Adriana M, Tilford John M, Anand K J S, Jo Chan-Hee, Green Jerril W, Aitken Mary E, Fiser Debra H
Department of Pediatric Critical Care, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (AML), San Antonio, TX, USA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2006 Jan;7(1):2-6. doi: 10.1097/01.pcc.0000192319.55850.81.
The differential allocation of medical resources to adult patients according to characteristics such as race, gender, and insurance status raises the serious concern that such issues apply to critically ill children as well.
This study examined whether medical resources and outcomes for children admitted to pediatric intensive care units differed according to race, gender, or insurance status.
An observational analysis was conducted with use of prospectively collected data from a multicenter cohort. Data were collected on 5,749 consecutive admissions for children from three pediatric intensive care units located in large urban children's hospitals.
Children aged </=18 years admitted over an 18-month period beginning in June 1996 formed the study sample.
Hospital mortality, length of hospital stay, and overall resource use were examined in relation to severity of illness. Standardized ratios were formed with generalized regression analyses that included the Pediatric Index of Mortality for risk adjustment.
After adjustment for differences in illness severity, standardized mortality ratios and overall resource use were similar with regard to race, gender, and insurance status, but uninsured children had significantly shorter lengths of stay in the pediatric intensive care unit. Uninsured children also had significantly greater physiologic derangement on admission (mortality probability, 8.1%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 6.2-10.0) than did publicly insured (3.6%; 95% CI, 3.2-4.0) and commercially insured patients (3.7%; 95% CI, 3.3-4.1). Consistent with greater physiologic derangement, hospital mortality was higher among uninsured children than insured children.
Risk-adjusted mortality and resource use for critically ill children did not differ according to race, gender, or insurance status. Policies to expand health insurance to children appear more likely to affect physiologic derangement on admission rather than technical quality of care in the pediatric intensive care unit setting.
根据种族、性别和保险状况等特征对成年患者进行医疗资源的差别分配,引发了人们对这些问题同样适用于危重症儿童的严重担忧。
本研究调查了入住儿科重症监护病房的儿童的医疗资源和治疗结果是否因种族、性别或保险状况而有所不同。
利用多中心队列前瞻性收集的数据进行观察性分析。收集了来自大型城市儿童医院的三个儿科重症监护病房连续收治的5749名儿童的数据。
1996年6月开始的18个月期间内收治的18岁及以下儿童构成了研究样本。
研究了与疾病严重程度相关的医院死亡率、住院时间和总体资源使用情况。通过广义回归分析形成标准化比率,其中包括用于风险调整的儿科死亡率指数。
在对疾病严重程度的差异进行调整后,标准化死亡率和总体资源使用在种族、性别和保险状况方面相似,但未参保儿童在儿科重症监护病房的住院时间明显更短。未参保儿童入院时的生理紊乱也明显比公共保险患者(3.6%;95%置信区间[CI],3.2 - 4.0)和商业保险患者(3.7%;95%CI,3.3 - 4.1)更严重(死亡概率,8.1%;95%CI,6.2 - 10.0)。与更严重的生理紊乱一致,未参保儿童的医院死亡率高于参保儿童。
危重症儿童经风险调整后的死亡率和资源使用在种族、性别或保险状况方面没有差异。将医疗保险扩大到儿童的政策似乎更有可能影响入院时的生理紊乱,而不是儿科重症监护病房的护理技术质量。