PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Racial and ethnic disparities narrow for acute care

Racial and ethnic disparities narrow for acute care
2014-12-11
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- A study of more than 12 million acute care hospitalizations over a five-year span found that as quality improved on each of 17 measures so did racial and ethnic equity. Nine major disparities evident in 2005 had mostly or totally disappeared by the end of 2010.

The study, led by Dr. Amal Trivedi of Brown University and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that care for blacks and Hispanics became better and more equitable when comparing hospitals principally serving whites to hospitals principally serving minorities, and when comparing changes in care over time within the same hospitals.

"This is happening because hospitals that disproportionately serve minority patients improved faster, and it's also the case that [individual] hospitals are delivering more equal care to white and minority patients over time," said Trivedi, associate professor of health services, policy, and practice in Brown's School of Public Health and a hospitalist at the Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Widespread evidence remains for racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in medicine, Trivedi said, and these results, while very positive, address only a narrow spectrum of care delivery. But they suggest that when hospitals strive to improve quality, they can also improve equity.

"The foundation of quality improvement rests on reducing and eliminating unwanted variation," Trivedi said. "Efforts to standardize care and make it more consistent may close gaps."

Co-author Dr. Michael Fine, professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and director of the Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion at the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, said that the results, while encouraging, concern services provided, not outcomes achieved.

"It is heartening that we found higher quality of care overall and large reductions in racial and ethnic disparities in health care for patients with these common conditions," he said. "However, it is critically important to demonstrate that these improvements in care are accompanied by better patient outcomes. Future studies are needed to investigate if racial and ethnic disparities in mortality have also decreased over time."

Improving quality, equity

The data in the study arose from an effort launched in 2004 by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to measure hospital care. The Inpatient Quality Reporting Program led to disclosures by 98 percent of non-federal acute care hospitals in the United States about how often they performed recommended treatments among patients with heart attack, heart failure, or pneumonia.

Hospitals publicly report aggregate data without regard to race or ethnicity. Trivedi and Fine's research team looked at the records to study performance trends in 12,447,154 hospitalizations from the beginning of 2005 to the end of 2010 among non-Hispanic whites, blacks, and Hispanics. They looked at the rates by race and ethnicity for 17 procedures across the three medical conditions. They looked at changes in each hospital's performance over time as well as comparisons among hospitals that predominantly served whites and hospitals that predominantly served minorities.

For all racial and ethnic groups, hospitals improved on all 17 metrics during the period, meaning that they provided all the recommended treatments more often. The overall range of improvements was between 3.4 and 58.3 percentage points as widely performed procedures such as giving an aspirin to heart attack patients inched up, and as less commonly performed treatments, such as giving a flu vaccine to pneumonia patients, became more standard.

At the beginning of 2005, there were nine metrics -- three among blacks and six among Hispanics -- for which there were white vs. minority gaps greater than five percentage points. By 2010, all the gaps had narrowed significantly. Gaps between blacks and whites tightened by 8.5 to 11.8 percentage points. Disparities between whites and Hispanics narrowed by 6.2 to 15.1 percentage points.

The case of PCI within 90 minutes

Take, for example, the case of providing percutaneous coronary intervention to heart attack patients within 90 minutes of arrival at the hospital. The complex but life-saving procedure involves clearing a blood clot in an artery in the heart, thereby restoring blood flow and improving the odds of surviving a heart attack. In 2005, PCI was performed within 90 minutes for whites 43.4 percent of the time, for blacks 29.2 percent of the time and for Hispanics 34.1 percent of the time. By 2010, it was done for whites in 91.7 percent of cases, for blacks in 86.3 percent of cases, and for Hispanics in 89.7 percent of cases.

When the researchers accounted for possibly confounding variables such as patient age, sex, other medical conditions, and socioeconomic status, and for hospital characteristics such as size, teaching status, and how often hospitals treat the three conditions, the remaining gaps in 2010 attributable to race or ethnicity proved even narrower: 3.8 percentage points for blacks and 1.1 percent for Hispanics, as compared to whites.

The statistical story of PCI is one in which a concerted national effort to make a crucial procedure a standard of care led to a significant narrowing -- but not complete elimination -- of what were glaring disparities only five years before.

Trivedi said he is encouraged by the results showing widespread improvement in overall quality and racial equity. As he and his co-authors wrote in the journal, equity and quality are inseparable criteria of good medical care.

"Equity is a key dimension of health care quality," they wrote. "Therefore, gauging progress in quality of care must explicitly consider whether gains have also occurred in health care equity."

INFORMATION:

In addition to Trivedi and Fine, the paper's other authors are Dr. Wato Nsa, Leslie Hausmann, Dr. Jonathan Lee, Allen Ma, Dr. Dale Bratzler, Maria Mor, Kristie Bause, and Fiona Larbi.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services provided funding for the study (contract HHSM-500-2011-OK10C).


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Racial and ethnic disparities narrow for acute care

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How to achieve health equity

2014-12-11
Despite recent significant gains in health care access throughout the nation, people of color continue to grapple with a disproportionate burden of chronic disease. Two studies in the current issue of the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) indicate that differences in how care is delivered to patients in various racial or ethnic groups have narrowed nationally, but health outcomes remain worse for blacks than for whites. In his editorial "How to Achieve Health Equity," also published in the just released NEJM, Marshall Chin, MD, MPH, the Richard Parrillo Family Professor ...

Novel fMRI technique identifies HIV-associated cognitive decline before symptoms occur

2014-12-11
WASHINGTON -- A five-minute functional MRI (fMRI) test can pick up neuronal dysfunction in HIV-positive individuals who don't yet exhibit cognitive decline, say neuroscientists and clinicians at Georgetown University Medical Center. Their study in Neuroimaging: Clinical provides proof-of-concept that imaging can help track neural functioning in this population, known to be affected by the virus and potentially by the treatments meant to keep HIV at bay. The issue of neural dysfunction in the HIV-positive population is significant, says Georgetown neuroscientist Xiong ...

Is care best in West? Racial gaps in Medicare Advantage persist across US, except in West

2014-12-11
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Despite years of effort to help American seniors with high blood pressure, heart disease, or diabetes get their blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar under control, new research shows wide gaps between older people of different ethnic backgrounds in all three of these key health measures. Black seniors in Medicare Advantage health plans are still much less likely than their white peers to have each of the three measures in check, according to a new study published in the December 11 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. If not well ...

Progesterone offers no significant benefit in traumatic brain injury clinical trial

2014-12-11
Treatment of acute traumatic brain injury with the hormone progesterone provides no significant benefit to patients when compared with placebo, a NIH-funded phase III clinical trial has concluded. The results are scheduled for publication Dec. 10 in the New England Journal of Medicine. The study, named ProTECT III, involved 49 trauma centers across the United States between July 2009 and November 2013. The study was originally planned to include 1,140 patients, but was stopped after 882 patients because safety monitors determined that additional enrollment would be ...

Study concludes that progesterone administered to severe TBI patients, showed no benefit

2014-12-11
A study concluded that after five days of treatment with a novel formulation of progesterone acutely administered to patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), showed no clinical benefits. The paper entitled, "A Clinical Trial of Progesterone for Severe Traumatic Brain Injury," will be published online in The New England Journal of Medicine, December 10, 2014. This trial, referred to as SyNAPSe, reports on a large prospective randomized clinical trial that investigated the effects of progesterone administered to severe TBI patients," said Raj K. Narayan, ...

Commonly prescribed painkiller not effective in controlling lower back pain

2014-12-10
A new study out today in the journal Neurology shows that pregabalin is not effective in controlling the pain associated with lumbar spinal stenosis, the most common type of chronic lower back pain in older adults. "Chronic low back pain is one of the most common reasons why older adults go to the doctor and lumbar stenosis is the leading indication for surgery in this age group," said John Markman, M.D., director of the Translational Pain Research Program in the University of Rochester Department of Neurosurgery and lead author of the study. "While physicians have ...

Study finds eczema, short stature not associated overall

2014-12-10
Eczema, an itchy chronic inflammatory disease of the skin, was not associated overall with short stature in an analysis of data from several studies, although a small group of children and adolescents with severe eczema who do not get enough sleep may have potentially reversible growth impairment, according to a study published online by JAMA Dermatology. Eczema (atopic dermatitis) affects about 10 percent of children and adults in the United States. The disease results in a number of conditions that could impact growth in children and adolescents, such as sleep impairment, ...

Islet cell transplantation after pancreas removal may help preserve normal blood sugar

2014-12-10
Surgery to remove all or part of the pancreas and then transplant a patient's own insulin-producing islet cells appears to be a safe and effective final measure to alleviate pain from severe chronic pancreatitis and to help prevent surgically induced diabetes, according to a report published online by JAMA Surgery. Chronic pancreatitis (CP) is an inflammatory disease that over time leads to loss of function of the pancreas and manifests with intractable pain, malabsorption and diabetes. While medical management and pain control are the initial approaches to CP, some patients ...

Can poor sleep lead to dementia?

2014-12-10
MINNEAPOLIS - People who have sleep apnea or spend less time in deep sleep may be more likely to have changes in the brain that are associated with dementia, according to a new study published in the December 10, 2014, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study found that people who don't have as much oxygen in their blood during sleep, which occurs with sleep apnea and conditions such as emphysema, are more likely to have tiny abnormalities in brain tissue, called micro infarcts, than people with higher levels ...

New study measures methane emissions from natural gas production and offers insights into 2 large sources

2014-12-10
A team of researchers from the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin and environmental testing firm URS reports that a small subset of natural gas wells are responsible for the majority of methane emissions from two major sources -- liquid unloadings and pneumatic controller equipment -- at natural gas production sites. With natural gas production in the United States expected to continue to increase during the next few decades, there is a need for a better understanding of methane emissions during natural gas production. The study team ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI finds undiagnosed liver disease in early stages

The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announce new research fellowship in malaria genomics in honor of professor Dominic Kwiatkowski

Excessive screen time linked to early puberty and accelerated bone growth

First nationwide study discovers link between delayed puberty in boys and increased hospital visits

Traditional Mayan practices have long promoted unique levels of family harmony. But what effect is globalization having?

New microfluidic device reveals how the shape of a tumour can predict a cancer’s aggressiveness

Speech Accessibility Project partners with The Matthew Foundation, Massachusetts Down Syndrome Congress

Mass General Brigham researchers find too much sitting hurts the heart

New study shows how salmonella tricks gut defenses to cause infection

Study challenges assumptions about how tuberculosis bacteria grow

NASA Goddard Lidar team receives Center Innovation Award for Advancements

Can AI improve plant-based meats?

How microbes create the most toxic form of mercury

‘Walk this Way’: FSU researchers’ model explains how ants create trails to multiple food sources

A new CNIC study describes a mechanism whereby cells respond to mechanical signals from their surroundings

Study uncovers earliest evidence of humans using fire to shape the landscape of Tasmania

Researchers uncover Achilles heel of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Scientists uncover earliest evidence of fire use to manage Tasmanian landscape

Interpreting population mean treatment effects in the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire

Targeting carbohydrate metabolism in colorectal cancer: Synergy of therapies

Stress makes mice’s memories less specific

Research finds no significant negative impact of repealing a Depression-era law allowing companies to pay workers with disabilities below minimum wage

Resilience index needed to keep us within planet’s ‘safe operating space’

How stress is fundamentally changing our memories

Time in nature benefits children with mental health difficulties: study

In vitro model enables study of age-specific responses to COVID mRNA vaccines

Sitting too long can harm heart health, even for active people

International cancer organizations present collaborative work during oncology event in China

One or many? Exploring the population groups of the largest animal on Earth

ETRI-F&U Credit Information Co., Ltd., opens a new path for AI-based professional consultation

[Press-News.org] Racial and ethnic disparities narrow for acute care