From the Center for Surgery and Public Health, Department of Surgery (M.P.J., C.S., M.K.D., M.C.-A., T.U.-L., Z.C.), Brigham and Women's Hospital; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery (M.H.), Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Orthopedics Surgery (A.v.K.), Brigham and Women's Hospital; and Division of Trauma, Burns, and Surgical Critical Care, Department of Surgery (M.C.-A., Z.C., A.S.), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2021 Jun 1;90(6):942-950. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000003149.
Black hip fracture patients experience worse health outcomes than otherwise similar White patients, but causes of these disparities are not known. We sought to determine if delays in hip fracture surgery and/or hospital structures contribute to racial disparities in hip fracture outcomes.
Using 2006 to 2016 Trauma Quality Program Public Use Files, we identified hip fracture patients with primary mechanisms of fall from standing and determined surgical treatment category (no surgery, surgery within 24 hours after arrival, surgery 24-48 hours after arrival, surgery more than 48 hours after arrival) as well as hospital structure characteristics (trauma center designation, teaching status, profit status, bed size). We used generalized structural equation models to conduct path analyses and determine if hip fracture treatment and hospital characteristics mediated the relationship between race (non-Hispanic Black/non-Hispanic White) and outcomes (complications, length of stay, disposition).
Non-Hispanic Black patients were more likely than non-Hispanic White patients to receive treatment at an academic medical center (49.1% vs. 28.0%), at a hospital with >600 inpatient beds (39.5% vs. 25.3%), and at a level I or II trauma center (86.8% vs. 77.7%); were more likely to go without hip fracture repair surgery (22.8% vs. 21.4%); and were more likely to have delayed surgery >48 hours after hospital arrival (15.5% vs. 10.6%). Path analysis suggests hip fracture treatment group and hospital characteristics mediate the relationship with complications, length of stay, and disposition.
Non-Hispanic Black patients with fall-related hip fracture are more likely to experience delays in care, complications, and longer inpatient stays. Hospital characteristics contribute to increased risk of complications and longer length of stay, both as independent determinants of outcomes and as determinants of delays in hip fracture surgery.
Prognostic and epidemiologic, level III.
黑人髋部骨折患者的健康状况比其他相似的白人患者差,但造成这种差异的原因尚不清楚。我们试图确定髋部骨折手术延迟和/或医院结构是否导致髋部骨折结果的种族差异。
使用 2006 年至 2016 年创伤质量计划公共使用文件,我们确定了主要机制为从站立位跌倒的髋部骨折患者,并确定了手术治疗类别(无手术、到达后 24 小时内手术、到达后 24-48 小时内手术、到达后超过 48 小时手术)以及医院结构特征(创伤中心指定、教学地位、盈利状况、床位数)。我们使用广义结构方程模型进行路径分析,以确定髋部骨折治疗和医院特征是否在种族(非西班牙裔黑人/非西班牙裔白人)和结果(并发症、住院时间、处置)之间的关系中起中介作用。
非西班牙裔黑人患者比非西班牙裔白人患者更有可能在学术医疗中心接受治疗(49.1%比 28.0%)、在拥有>600 张住院病床的医院接受治疗(39.5%比 25.3%)、在一级或二级创伤中心接受治疗(86.8%比 77.7%);更有可能不接受髋部骨折修复手术(22.8%比 21.4%);更有可能在入院后超过 48 小时延迟手术(15.5%比 10.6%)。路径分析表明,髋部骨折治疗组和医院特征中介了与并发症、住院时间和处置的关系。
与跌倒相关的髋部骨折的非西班牙裔黑人患者更有可能出现护理延迟、并发症和住院时间延长。医院特征导致并发症风险增加和住院时间延长,这既是结果的独立决定因素,也是髋部骨折手术延迟的决定因素。
预后和流行病学,三级。