Howell Elizabeth A, Hebert Paul, Chatterjee Samprit, Kleinman Lawrence C, Chassin Mark R
Department of Health Policy, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1077, New York, NY 10029-6574, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Mar;121(3):e407-15. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-0910. Epub 2008 Feb 11.
We sought to determine whether differences in the hospitals at which black and white infants are born contribute to black/white disparities in very low birth weight neonatal mortality rates in New York City.
We performed a population-based cohort study using New York City vital statistics records on all live births and deaths of infants weighing 500 to 1499 g who were born in 45 hospitals between January 1, 1996, and December 31, 2001 (N = 11 781). We measured very low birth weight risk-adjusted neonatal mortality rates for each New York City hospital and assessed differences in the distributions of non-Hispanic black and non-Hispanic white very low birth weight births among these hospitals.
Risk-adjusted neonatal mortality rates for very low birth weight infants in New York City hospitals ranged from 9.6 to 27.2 deaths per 1000 births. White very low birth weight infants were more likely to be born in the lowest mortality tertile of hospitals (49%), compared with black very low birth weight infants (29%). We estimated that, if black women delivered in the same hospitals as white women, then black very low birth weight mortality rates would be reduced by 6.7 deaths per 1000 very low birth weight births, removing 34.5% of the black/white disparity in very low birth weight neonatal mortality rates in New York City. Volume of very low birth weight deliveries was modestly associated with very low birth weight mortality rates but explained little of the racial disparity.
Black very low birth weight infants more likely to be born in New York City hospitals with higher risk-adjusted neonatal mortality rates than were very low birth weight infants, contributing substantially to black-white disparities.
我们试图确定黑人与白人婴儿出生所在医院的差异是否会导致纽约市极低出生体重新生儿死亡率的种族差异。
我们进行了一项基于人群的队列研究,使用纽约市1996年1月1日至2001年12月31日期间在45家医院出生的所有体重500至1499克婴儿的生命统计记录(N = 11781)。我们测量了纽约市每家医院的极低出生体重风险调整后的新生儿死亡率,并评估了这些医院中非西班牙裔黑人与非西班牙裔白人极低出生体重儿分布的差异。
纽约市医院中极低出生体重婴儿的风险调整后新生儿死亡率为每1000例出生9.6至27.2例死亡。白人极低出生体重婴儿比黑人极低出生体重婴儿更有可能在死亡率最低的三分位医院出生(49%对29%)。我们估计,如果黑人女性与白人女性在同一家医院分娩,那么黑人极低出生体重死亡率将降低至每1000例极低出生体重儿中有6.7例死亡,消除纽约市极低出生体重新生儿死亡率中34.5%的种族差异。极低出生体重分娩量与极低出生体重死亡率有适度关联,但对种族差异的解释很少。
与极低出生体重白人婴儿相比,纽约市黑人极低出生体重婴儿更有可能出生在风险调整后新生儿死亡率较高的医院,这在很大程度上导致了种族差异。