Massachussetts General Hospital, Department of Medicine, Center for Global Health, Boston, MA, USA; Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Am J Emerg Med. 2021 Aug;46:532-538. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2020.11.010. Epub 2020 Nov 11.
Hospital observation is a key disposition option from the emergency department (ED) and encompasses up to one third of patients requiring post-ED care. Observation has been associated with higher incidence of catastrophic financial costs and has downstream effects on post-discharge clinical services. Yet little is known about the non-clinical determinants of observation assignment. We sought to evaluate the impact of patient-level demographic factors on observation designation among Maryland patients.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of all ED encounters in Maryland between July 2012 and January 2017 for four priority diagnoses (heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD], pneumonia, and acute chest pain) using multilevel logistic models allowing for heterogeneity of the effects across hospitals. The primary exposure was self-reported race and ethnicity. The primary outcome was the initial status assignment from the ED: hospital observation versus inpatient admission.
Across 46 Maryland hospitals, 259,788 patient encounters resulted in a disposition of inpatient admission (65%) or observation designation (35%). Black (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.19; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.16-1.23) and Hispanic (aOR: 1.11; 95% CI: 1.01-1.21) patients were significantly more likely to be placed in observation than white, non-Hispanic patients. These differences were consistent across the majority of acute-care hospitals in Maryland (27/46).
Black and Hispanic patients in Maryland are more likely to be treated under the observation designation than white, non-Hispanic patients independent of clinical presentation. Race agnostic, time-based status assignments may be key in eliminating these disparities.
医院观察是急诊科(ED)的关键处置选择,涵盖了三分之一需要 ED 后护理的患者。观察与灾难性财务成本的发生率较高有关,并对出院后的临床服务产生下游影响。然而,人们对观察分配的非临床决定因素知之甚少。我们试图评估患者层面人口统计学因素对马里兰州患者观察指定的影响。
我们使用多水平逻辑模型对 2012 年 7 月至 2017 年 1 月期间马里兰州所有 ED 就诊的四种优先诊断(心力衰竭、慢性阻塞性肺疾病 [COPD]、肺炎和急性胸痛)进行了回顾性分析,允许医院之间的效应异质性。主要暴露是自我报告的种族和民族。主要结果是 ED 的初始状态分配:医院观察与住院入院。
在 46 家马里兰州医院中,259788 例患者就诊的处置结果为住院入院(65%)或观察指定(35%)。黑人(调整后的优势比 [aOR]:1.19;95%置信区间 [CI]:1.16-1.23)和西班牙裔(aOR:1.11;95% CI:1.01-1.21)患者比白人非西班牙裔患者更有可能被安置在观察中。这些差异在马里兰州的大多数急性护理医院(27/46)中是一致的。
马里兰州的黑人和西班牙裔患者比白人非西班牙裔患者更有可能被指定为观察治疗,而与临床表现无关。基于种族的、基于时间的状态分配可能是消除这些差异的关键。