Berbee Walsh Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
School of Nursing, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2023 Jul;71(7):2194-2207. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18311. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
Readmissions contribute to excessive care costs and burden for people living with dementia. Assessments of racial disparities in readmissions among dementia populations are lacking, and the role of social and geographic risk factors such as individual-level exposure to greater neighborhood disadvantage is poorly understood. We examined the association between race and 30-day readmissions in a nationally representative sample of Black and non-Hispanic White individuals with dementia diagnoses.
This retrospective cohort study used 100% Medicare fee-for-service claims from all 2014 hospitalizations nationwide among Medicare enrollees with dementia diagnosis linked to patient, stay, and hospital factors. The sample consisted of 1,523,142 hospital stays among 945,481 beneficiaries. The relationship between all cause 30-day readmissions and the explanatory variable of self-reported race (Black, non-Hispanic White) was examined via generalized estimating equations approach adjusting for patient, stay, and hospital-level characteristics to model 30-day readmission odds.
Black Medicare beneficiaries had 37% higher readmission odds compared to White beneficiaries (unadjusted OR 1.37, CI 1.35-1.39). This heightened readmission risk persisted after adjusting for geographic factors (OR 1.33, CI 1.31-1.34), social factors (OR 1.25, CI 1.23-1.27), hospital characteristics (OR 1.24, CI 1.23-1.26), stay-level factors (OR 1.22, CI 1.21-1.24), demographics (OR 1.21, CI 1.19-1.23), and comorbidities (OR 1.16, CI 1.14-1.17), suggesting racially-patterned disparities in care account for a portion of observed differences. Associations varied by individual-level exposure to neighborhood disadvantage such that the protective effect of living in a less disadvantaged neighborhood was associated with reduced readmissions for White but not Black beneficiaries. Conversely, among White beneficiaries, exposure to the most disadvantaged neighborhoods associated with greater readmission rates compared to White beneficiaries residing in less disadvantaged contexts.
There are significant racial and geographic disparities in 30-day readmission rates among Medicare beneficiaries with dementia diagnoses. Findings suggest distinct mechanisms underlying observed disparities differentially influence various subpopulations.
再入院给痴呆患者的生活带来了过度的医疗费用和负担。在痴呆人群中,种族差异再入院评估缺乏,个人层面接触更多邻里劣势等社会和地理风险因素的作用也知之甚少。我们在一个全国性的、有代表性的黑人和非西班牙裔白人痴呆患者样本中,检查了种族与 30 天再入院之间的关系。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,利用了全国范围内所有 2014 年医疗保险全付费服务索赔中,与患者、住院和医院因素相关的痴呆诊断的 Medicare 参保者 100%的住院记录。该样本包括 945481 名受益人中的 1523142 次住院。通过广义估计方程方法,调整患者、住院和医院水平的特征,来模拟 30 天再入院的几率,从而检验全因 30 天再入院与自我报告的种族(黑人、非西班牙裔白人)这一解释变量之间的关系。
与白人受益人相比,黑人医疗保险受益人再入院的几率高出 37%(未调整的 OR 1.37,CI 1.35-1.39)。在调整了地理因素(OR 1.33,CI 1.31-1.34)、社会因素(OR 1.25,CI 1.23-1.27)、医院特征(OR 1.24,CI 1.23-1.26)、住院期间特征(OR 1.22,CI 1.21-1.24)、人口统计学特征(OR 1.21,CI 1.19-1.23)和合并症(OR 1.16,CI 1.14-1.17)后,这种升高的再入院风险仍然存在,这表明护理中的种族模式差异解释了观察到的差异的一部分。关联性因个体接触邻里劣势的程度而异,生活在劣势程度较低的社区的保护作用与白人而非黑人受益人的再入院率降低有关。相反,在白人受益人群中,与居住在劣势程度较低的环境中的白人受益人群相比,接触到最劣势的社区与更高的再入院率相关。
在有痴呆诊断的医疗保险受益人群中,30 天再入院率存在显著的种族和地理差异。研究结果表明,观察到的差异背后存在不同的机制,这些机制以不同的方式影响不同的亚人群。