Chamberlain James M, Joseph Jill G, Patel Kantilal M, Pollack Murray M
Department of Pediatrics, George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, USA.
Pediatrics. 2007 Jun;119(6):e1319-24. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2309.
Racial/ethnic disparities in health care delivery have been well described, but little is known about such disparities for children who seek emergency care. The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that severity-adjusted emergency department pediatric admission rates are associated with race/ethnicity.
Secondary analyses were conducted of an established database of 16 emergency departments that participated in a national study to validate the Pediatric Risk of Admission II score, which is used to measure severity of illness. Patients were randomly selected by the coordinating center from daily emergency department visit logs. Crude and severity-adjusted admission rates were compared among the 3 most common races/ethnicities: white, black, and Hispanic. Adjusted admission rates were calculated by using the standardized admission ratio, which was calculated by dividing the observed admissions by the predicted admissions, when predicted was calculated from the Pediatric Risk of Admission II score.
After exclusion of 3 sites that recorded race/ethnicity in <10% of patients, there were 13 sites with 8952 patients in the 3 major race/ethnicity groups. Black and Hispanic patients were similar to each other and different from white patients; therefore, these 2 groups were combined for analyses. Both crude (8.2% vs 5.3%) and severity-adjusted (standardized admission ratio: 1.71 vs 1.1) admission rates were higher in white than in nonwhite patients. Standardized admission ratios were close to 1.0 in both race/ethnicity groups in the higher quintiles of illness severity. In contrast, white patients were admitted at 1.5 to 2 times the expected rate in the lowest 2 quintiles of severity.
There are differences in both crude and adjusted admission rates between white and black/Hispanic patients. The results are more consistent with high rates of discretionary admissions for white patients with low illness severity than with underadmitting severely ill black or Hispanic patients.
医疗服务中的种族/民族差异已有详尽描述,但对于寻求急诊治疗的儿童中的此类差异却知之甚少。本研究的目的是检验以下假设:经病情严重程度调整后的急诊科儿科住院率与种族/民族相关。
对一个由16个急诊科组成的既定数据库进行二次分析,这些急诊科参与了一项全国性研究,以验证用于衡量疾病严重程度的儿科入院风险II评分。协调中心从每日急诊科就诊记录中随机选取患者。比较了3种最常见种族/民族(白人、黑人、西班牙裔)的粗住院率和经病情严重程度调整后的住院率。调整后的住院率通过标准化住院比计算得出,标准化住院比的计算方法是将观察到的住院人数除以预测的住院人数,而预测的住院人数是根据儿科入院风险II评分计算得出的。
在排除了3个种族/民族记录率低于10%患者的地点后,有13个地点的3个主要种族/民族组中有8952名患者。黑人和西班牙裔患者彼此相似,与白人患者不同;因此,将这两个组合并进行分析。白人患者的粗住院率(8.2%对5.3%)和经病情严重程度调整后的住院率(标准化住院比:1.71对1.1)均高于非白人患者。在疾病严重程度较高的五分位数中,两个种族/民族组的标准化住院比均接近1.0。相比之下,在严重程度最低的两个五分位数中,白人患者的入院率是预期率的1.5至2倍。
白人与黑人和/或西班牙裔患者之间在粗住院率和调整后的住院率方面均存在差异。这些结果更符合病情较轻的白人患者酌情住院率较高的情况,而不是病情严重的黑人或西班牙裔患者住院不足的情况。