Taylor A. Melanson is a doctoral student in the Laney Graduate School, Emory University, in Atlanta, Georgia.
Jason M. Hockenberry is an associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management, Rollins School of Public Health, at Emory University.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2017 Jun 1;36(6):1078-1085. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2016.1625.
Before the 2014 implementation of a new kidney allocation system by the United Network for Organ Sharing, white patients were more likely than black or Hispanic patients to receive a kidney transplant. To determine the effect of the new allocation system on these disparities, we examined data for 179,071 transplant waiting list events in the period June 2013-September 2016, and we calculated monthly transplantation rates (34,133 patients actually received transplants). Implementation of the new system was associated with a narrowing of the disparities in the average monthly transplantation rates by 0.29 percentage point for blacks compared to whites and by 0.24 percentage point for Hispanics compared to whites, which resulted in both disparities becoming nonsignificant after implementation of the new system.
在 2014 年美国器官共享联合网络实施新的肾脏分配系统之前,白人患者比黑人和西班牙裔患者更有可能接受肾脏移植。为了确定新的分配系统对这些差异的影响,我们研究了 2013 年 6 月至 2016 年 9 月期间 179071 例移植候补名单事件的数据,并计算了每月的移植率(实际上有 34133 名患者接受了移植)。新系统的实施使黑人与白人相比,平均每月移植率的差异缩小了 0.29 个百分点,西班牙裔与白人相比,平均每月移植率的差异缩小了 0.24 个百分点,这导致新系统实施后这两个差异都变得无统计学意义。