Division of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Center for Injury Research and Prevention, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 Oct 1;7(10):e2442332. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.42332.
Many recent advances in pediatric concussion care are implemented by specialists; however, children with concussion receive care across varied locations. Thus, it is critical to identify which children have access to the most up-to-date treatment strategies.
To evaluate differences in the sociodemographic and community characteristics of pediatric patients who sought care for concussion across various points of entry into a regional health care network.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study included children seen for concussions across a regional US health care network from January 1, 2017, to August 4, 2023. Pediatric patients aged 0 to 18 years who received an International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification code for concussion were included. The study took place at emergency department (ED) and outpatient (primary care [PC] and specialty care [SC]) settings.
Age at visit, biological sex, parent-identified race and ethnicity, payer type, median income and percentage of adults with a bachelor's degree for home zip code, and overall and subdomain Child Opportunity Index (COI) score based on patient address.
The association of exposures with point of entry of ED, PC, and SC were examined in both bivariate analysis and a multinomial logistic regression.
Overall, 15 631 patients were included in the study (median [IQR] age, 13 [11-15] years; 7879 [50.4%] male; 1055 [6.7%] Hispanic, 2865 [18.3%] non-Hispanic Black, and 9887 [63.7%] non-Hispanic White individuals). Race and ethnicity were significantly different across settings (1485 patients [50.0%] seen in the ED were non-Hispanic Black vs 1012 [12.0%] in PC and 368 [8.7%] in SC; P < .001) as was insurance status (1562 patients [52.6%] seen in the ED possessed public insurance vs 1624 [19.3%] in PC and 683 [16.1%] in SC; P < .001). Overall and individual COI subdomain scores were also significantly different between settings (overall COI median [IQR]: ED, 30 [9-71]; PC, 87 [68-95]; SC, 87 [69-95]; P < .001). Race, insurance status, and overall COI had the strongest associations with point of entry in the multivariable model (eg, non-Hispanic Black patients seen in the ED compared with non-Hispanic White patients: odds ratio, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.69-2.45).
In this cross-sectional study, children with concussion seen in the ED setting were more likely to be non-Hispanic Black, have public insurance, and have a lower Child Opportunity Index compared with children cared for in the PC or SC setting. This highlights the importance of providing education and training for ED clinicians as well as establishing up-to-date community-level resources to optimize care delivery for pediatric patients with concussion at high risk of care inequities.
许多最近在儿科脑震荡护理方面的进展都是由专家实施的;然而,患有脑震荡的儿童在不同的地方接受护理。因此,关键是要确定哪些儿童可以获得最新的治疗策略。
评估在进入区域医疗保健网络的不同点寻求脑震荡护理的儿科患者在社会人口统计学和社区特征方面的差异。
设计、地点和参与者:本横断面研究包括 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2023 年 8 月 4 日期间在美国一个地区性医疗保健网络中因脑震荡就诊的儿童。纳入标准为接受国际疾病与相关健康问题第十次修订临床修正国际统计分类编码的 0 至 18 岁儿童。研究发生在急诊部 (ED) 和门诊 (初级保健 [PC] 和专科保健 [SC])。
就诊时的年龄、生物性别、父母认定的种族和民族、支付类型、家庭邮政编码的中位数收入和拥有学士学位的成年人比例,以及基于患者地址的整体和子域儿童机会指数 (COI) 评分。
在双变量分析和多项逻辑回归中,检查了暴露与 ED、PC 和 SC 进入点的关联。
共有 15631 名患者纳入研究(中位数 [IQR] 年龄为 13 [11-15] 岁;7879 名 [50.4%] 男性;1055 名 [6.7%] 西班牙裔、2865 名 [18.3%] 非西班牙裔黑人,9887 名 [63.7%] 非西班牙裔白人个体)。不同就诊地点的种族和民族差异显著(1485 名 [50.0%] 在 ED 就诊的患者为非西班牙裔黑人,而 1012 名 [12.0%] 在 PC 和 368 名 [8.7%] 在 SC 就诊;P<0.001),保险状况也不同(1562 名 [52.6%] 在 ED 就诊的患者拥有公共保险,而 1624 名 [19.3%] 在 PC 和 683 名 [16.1%] 在 SC 就诊;P<0.001)。不同就诊地点的整体和个体 COI 子域评分也存在显著差异(整体 COI 中位数 [IQR]:ED,30 [9-71];PC,87 [68-95];SC,87 [69-95];P<0.001)。在多变量模型中,种族、保险状况和整体 COI 与就诊点的关联最强(例如,与非西班牙裔白人患者相比,在 ED 就诊的非西班牙裔黑人患者:比值比,2.03;95%CI,1.69-2.45)。
在这项横断面研究中,与在 PC 或 SC 就诊的儿童相比,在 ED 就诊的患有脑震荡的儿童更有可能是非西班牙裔黑人、拥有公共保险,并且儿童机会指数较低。这突显了为 ED 临床医生提供教育和培训以及建立最新的社区资源以优化高风险脑震荡儿童护理的重要性,以避免护理不平等。