Division of Minimally Invasive Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2013 Jun;32(6):1046-53. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2011.1365.
Research has shown that black patients more frequently undergo surgery at low-quality hospitals than do white patients. We assessed the extent to which living in racially segregated areas and living in geographic proximity to low-quality hospitals contribute to this disparity. Using national Medicare data for all patients who underwent one of three high-risk surgical procedures in 2005-08, we found that black patients actually tended to live closer to higher-quality hospitals than white patients did but were 25-58 percent more likely than whites to receive surgery at low-quality hospitals. Racial segregation was also a factor, with black patients in the most segregrated areas 41-96 percent more likely than white patients to undergo surgery at low-quality hospitals. To address these disparities, care navigators and public reporting of comparative quality could steer patients and their referring physicians to higher-quality hospitals, while quality improvement efforts could focus on improving outcomes for high-risk surgery at hospitals that disproportionately serve black patients. Unfortunately, existing policies such as pay-for-performance, bundled payments, and nonpayment for adverse events may divert resources and exacerbate these disparities.
研究表明,与白人患者相比,黑人患者更频繁地在低质量医院接受手术。我们评估了生活在种族隔离地区以及生活在靠近低质量医院的地区在多大程度上导致了这种差异。利用 2005-2008 年间所有接受三种高风险手术之一的医疗保险患者的全国数据,我们发现,黑人患者实际上比白人患者更倾向于居住在高质量医院附近,但他们在低质量医院接受手术的可能性比白人患者高 25%至 58%。种族隔离也是一个因素,在种族隔离最严重的地区,黑人患者接受低质量医院手术的可能性比白人患者高 41%至 96%。为了解决这些差异,可以通过护理导航员和比较质量的公共报告来引导患者及其转诊医生选择高质量的医院,而质量改进工作可以集中在提高为黑人患者提供服务的医院的高风险手术的结果上。不幸的是,现有的政策,如按绩效付费、捆绑支付和对不良事件不付款,可能会转移资源并加剧这些差异。