Herrera Adriana, Hall Matt, Alex Ahearn Marshall, Ahuja Arshiya, Bradford Kathleen K, Campbell Robert A, Chatterjee Ashmita, Coletti Hannah Y, Crowder Virginia L, Dancel Ria, Diaz Melissa, Fuchs Jennifer, Guidici Jessica, Lewis Emilee, Stephens John R, Sutton Ashley G, Sweeney Alison, Ward Kelley M, Weinberg Steven, Zwemer Eric K, Harrison Wade N
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Analytics, Children's Hospital Association, Lenexa, Kansas, USA.
J Hosp Med. 2024 May;19(5):368-376. doi: 10.1002/jhm.13305. Epub 2024 Feb 21.
Racial and ethnic differences in drug testing have been described among adults and newborns. Less is known regarding testing patterns among children and adolescents. We sought to describe the association between race and ethnicity and drug testing at US children's hospitals. We hypothesized that non-Hispanic White children undergo drug testing less often than children from other groups.
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of emergency department (ED)-only encounters and hospitalizations for children diagnosed with a condition for which drug testing may be indicated (abuse or neglect, burns, malnutrition, head injury, vomiting, altered mental status or syncope, psychiatric, self-harm, and seizure) at 41 children's hospitals participating in the Pediatric Health Information System during 2018 and 2021. We compared drug testing rates among (non-Hispanic) Asian, (non-Hispanic) Black, Hispanic, and (non-Hispanic) White children overall, by condition and patient cohort (ED-only vs. hospitalized) and across hospitals.
Among 920,755 encounters, 13.6% underwent drug testing. Black children were tested at significantly higher rates overall (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.18; 1.05-1.33) than White children. Black-White testing differences were observed in the hospitalized cohort (aOR: 1.42; 1.18-1.69) but not among ED-only encounters (aOR: 1.07; 0.92-1.26). Asian, Hispanic, and White children underwent testing at similar rates. Testing varied by diagnosis and across hospitals.
Hospitalized Black children were more likely than White children to undergo drug testing at US children's hospitals, though this varied by diagnosis and hospital. Our results support efforts to better understand and address healthcare disparities, including the contributions of implicit bias and structural racism.
药物检测方面的种族差异在成人和新生儿中已有描述。但对于儿童和青少年的检测模式了解较少。我们试图描述美国儿童医院中种族与药物检测之间的关联。我们假设非西班牙裔白人儿童接受药物检测的频率低于其他群体的儿童。
我们对2018年至2021年期间参与儿科健康信息系统的41家儿童医院中仅在急诊科就诊以及住院的儿童进行了一项回顾性队列研究,这些儿童被诊断患有可能需要进行药物检测的疾病(滥用或忽视、烧伤、营养不良、头部受伤、呕吐、精神状态改变或晕厥、精神疾病、自残和癫痫发作)。我们比较了(非西班牙裔)亚洲、(非西班牙裔)黑人、西班牙裔和(非西班牙裔)白人儿童总体上、按病情和患者队列(仅急诊科就诊与住院)以及不同医院之间的药物检测率。
在920,755次就诊中,13.6%的儿童接受了药物检测。总体而言,黑人儿童接受检测的比例显著高于白人儿童(调整后的优势比[aOR]:1.18;1.05 - 1.33)。在住院队列中观察到黑人和白人之间的检测差异(aOR:1.42;1.18 - 1.69),但在仅急诊科就诊的儿童中未观察到差异(aOR:1.07;0.92 - 1.26)。亚洲、西班牙裔和白人儿童的检测率相似。检测率因诊断和医院而异。
在美国儿童医院中,住院的黑人儿童比白人儿童更有可能接受药物检测,不过这因诊断和医院而异。我们的结果支持努力更好地理解和解决医疗保健差距,包括隐性偏见和结构性种族主义的影响。