Pines Jesse M, Russell Localio A, Hollander Judd E
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2009 May;16(5):403-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2009.00381.x. Epub 2009 Feb 24.
Recent studies have demonstrated the adverse effects of prolonged emergency department (ED) boarding times on outcomes. The authors sought to examine racial disparities across U.S. hospitals in ED length of stay (LOS) for admitted patients, which may serve as a proxy for boarding time in data sets where the actual time of admission is unavailable. Specifically, the study estimated both the within- and among-hospital effects of black versus non-black race on LOS for admitted patients.
The authors studied 14,516 intensive care unit (ICU) and non-ICU admissions in 408 EDs in the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS; 2003-2005). The main outcomes were ED LOS (triage to transfer to inpatient bed) and proportion of patients with prolonged LOS (>6 hours). The effects of black versus non-black race on LOS were decomposed to distinguish racial disparities between patients at the same hospital (within-hospital component) and between hospitals that serve higher proportions of black patients (among-hospital component).
In the unadjusted analyses, ED LOS was significantly longer for black patients admitted to ICU beds (367 minutes vs. 290 minutes) and non-ICU beds (397 minutes vs. 345 minutes). For admissions to ICU beds, the within-hospital estimates suggested that blacks were at higher risk for ED LOS of >6 hours (odds ratio [OR] = 1.42, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.01 to 2.01), while the among-hospital differences were not significant (OR = 1.08 for each 10% increase in the proportion of black patients, 95% CI = 0.96 to 1.23). By contrast, for non-ICU admissions, the within-hospital racial disparities were not significant (OR = 1.12, 95% CI = 0.94 to 1.23), but the among-hospital differences were significant (OR = 1.13, 95% CI = 1.04 to 1.22) per 10% point increase in the percentage of blacks admitted to a hospital.
Black patients who are admitted to the hospital through the ED have longer ED LOS compared to non-blacks, indicating that racial disparities may exist across U.S. hospitals. The disparity for non-ICU patients might be accounted for by among-hospital differences, where hospitals with a higher proportion of blacks have longer waits. The disparity for ICU patients is better explained by within-hospital differences, where blacks have longer wait times than non-blacks in the same hospital. However, there may be additional unmeasured clinical or socioeconomic factors that explain these results.
近期研究已证实急诊科(ED)候诊时间延长对治疗结果的不利影响。作者试图研究美国各医院收治患者的急诊留观时间(LOS)方面的种族差异,在无法获取实际入院时间的数据集里,这可作为候诊时间的一个替代指标。具体而言,该研究估计了黑人与非黑人种族对收治患者留观时间的医院内部和医院之间的影响。
作者研究了国家医院门诊医疗调查(NHAMCS;2003 - 2005年)中408家急诊科的14516例重症监护病房(ICU)和非ICU收治病例。主要结局指标为急诊留观时间(从分诊到转至住院病床)以及留观时间延长(>6小时)的患者比例。将黑人与非黑人种族对留观时间的影响进行分解,以区分同一家医院内患者之间的种族差异(医院内部因素)以及收治黑人患者比例较高的医院之间的差异(医院之间因素)。
在未经调整的分析中,入住ICU病床的黑人患者急诊留观时间显著更长(367分钟对290分钟),入住非ICU病床的黑人患者也是如此(397分钟对345分钟)。对于入住ICU病床的患者,医院内部估计显示黑人留观时间>6小时的风险更高(优势比[OR]=1.42,95%置信区间[CI]=1.01至2.01),而医院之间的差异不显著(黑人患者比例每增加10%,OR = 1.08,95% CI = 0.96至1.23)。相比之下,对于非ICU收治病例,医院内部的种族差异不显著(OR = 1.12,95% CI = 0.94至1.23),但医院之间的差异显著(每家医院收治黑人患者百分比每增加10个百分点,OR = 1.13,95% CI = 1.04至1.22)。
通过急诊科入院的黑人患者急诊留观时间比非黑人患者更长,这表明美国各医院可能存在种族差异。非ICU患者的差异可能是由医院之间的差异导致的,即收治黑人患者比例较高的医院等待时间更长。ICU患者的差异更好地由医院内部差异来解释,即在同一家医院中黑人的等待时间比非黑人更长。然而,可能还有其他未测量的临床或社会经济因素可以解释这些结果。