Division of General and Community Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH; Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH.
Division of Neonatal and Pulmonary Biology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH.
J Pediatr. 2024 May;268:113930. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2024.113930. Epub 2024 Feb 1.
To evaluate whether racial and socioeconomic inequities in pediatric palliative care utilization extend to children with high-intensity neurologic impairment (HI-NI), which is a chronic neurological diagnosis resulting in substantial functional morbidity and mortality.
We conducted a retrospective study of patients with HI-NI who received primary care services at a tertiary care center from 2014 through 2019. HI-NI diagnoses that warranted a palliative care referral were identified by consensus of a multidisciplinary team. The outcome was referral to palliative care. The primary exposure was race, categorized as Black or non-Black to represent the impact of anti-Black racism. Additional exposures included ethnicity (Hispanic/non-Hispanic) and insurance status (Medicaid/non-Medicaid). Descriptive statistics, bivariate analyses, and multivariable logistic regression models were performed to assess associations between exposures and palliative care referral.
A total of 801 patients with HI-NI were included; 7.5% received a palliative referral. There were no differences in gestational age, sex, or ethnicity between patients who received a referral and those who did not. In multivariable analysis, adjusting for ethnicity, sex, gestational age, and presence of complex chronic conditions, Black children (aOR 0.47, 95% CI 0.26, 0.84) and children with Medicaid insurance (aOR 0.40, 95% CI 0.23, 0.70) each had significantly lower odds of palliative referral compared with their non-Black and non-Medicaid-insured peers, respectively.
We identified inequities in pediatric palliative care referral among children with HI-NI by race and insurance status. Future work is needed to develop interventions, with families, aimed at promoting more equitable, antiracist systems of palliative care.
评估在儿科姑息治疗利用方面的种族和社会经济不平等是否延伸至患有高强度神经损伤(HI-NI)的儿童,这是一种导致大量功能发病率和死亡率的慢性神经诊断。
我们对 2014 年至 2019 年在一家三级保健中心接受初级保健服务的 HI-NI 患者进行了回顾性研究。通过多学科团队的共识确定需要姑息治疗转介的 HI-NI 诊断。结果是转介姑息治疗。主要暴露因素是种族,分为黑人或非黑人,以代表反黑人种族主义的影响。其他暴露因素包括族裔(西班牙裔/非西班牙裔)和保险状况(医疗补助/非医疗补助)。进行了描述性统计、双变量分析和多变量逻辑回归模型,以评估暴露因素与姑息治疗转介之间的关联。
共纳入 801 名 HI-NI 患者;7.5%接受了姑息治疗转介。接受转介和未接受转介的患者在胎龄、性别或族裔方面没有差异。在多变量分析中,调整了族裔、性别、胎龄和复杂慢性疾病的存在后,黑人儿童(aOR 0.47,95%CI 0.26,0.84)和拥有医疗补助保险的儿童(aOR 0.40,95%CI 0.23,0.70)与非黑人和非医疗补助保险的同龄人相比,接受姑息治疗转介的可能性明显较低。
我们根据种族和保险状况确定了 HI-NI 儿童姑息治疗转介方面的不平等。未来需要与家庭合作开展工作,制定干预措施,以促进更公平、反种族主义的姑息治疗系统。