(Press-News.org) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — While acute myocardial infarction — commonly referred to as a heart attack — remains a leading cause of death in the United States, deaths have decreased significantly over the past two decades in part due to improved treatment methods, according to Charleen Hsuan, associate professor of health policy and administration at Penn State. However, not all patients may receive the recommended treatment.
According to a new study, led by Hsuan, Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black patients in Florida who experienced a ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) — a severe type of heart attack where a major coronary artery is completely blocked — were less likely to receive the recommended treatment of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) compared to non-Hispanic white patients.
The study was recently published in JAMA Network Open.
“I’ve always been interested in emergency care quality and how that quality can differ between patients based on their insurance status and demographics,” Hsuan said. “There is a lot of research about these differences, making it difficult for policymakers to pinpoint where they should pay attention. By focusing on one specific condition, we can begin to understand where their focus should be to combat the disparities in treatment received by patients.”
Approximately one-fourth of acute myocardial infarctions are STEMIs. Improved methods to treat STEMI patients include thrombolytic therapy — using medication to dissolve blood clots — and PCI — a minimally invasive medical procedure that improves blood flow to the heart by widening narrow or blocked arteries.
According to previous research, PCI reduces the mortality in STEMI patients by approximately 30%. Clinical guidelines recommend PCI for STEMI patients within 90 minutes if they arrive at a hospital with the ability to administer PCI and within 120 minutes if a hospital transfer is needed.
In the current study, to better understand how well hospitals follow the guidelines and the potential care pathways available to patients, the research team analyzed a sample of 139,629 patients in the state of Florida who were diagnosed with STEMI between 2011 and 2021. First, they mapped out whether a patient initially came to a hospital that had PCI capability and if the patient received PCI. If not, the researchers examined whether the patient was transferred to a different hospital and whether they received PCI at the new hospital.
They found significant racial disparities across all steps of the emergency care process, according to Hsuan.
Among patients in the sample, 82.6% of non-Hispanic white patients initially came to a PCI-capable hospital to receive care. In contrast, non-Hispanic Black patients were less likely than white patients to come to a PCI-capable hospital.
Of the Black patients who did initially come to a PCI-capable hospital, they were 10.7% less likely to receive a PCI compared to white patients. Of the patients who initially came to a non-PCI capable hospital, Black patients were 5.3% less likely than white patients to be transferred to another hospital. Of those who were transferred, Black patients were 20.3% less likely to receive a PCI at the transfer hospital.
Hispanic patients experienced disparities at some steps in the care process, but not all. Hispanic patients were 3.8% less likely than white patients to initially come to a PCI-capable hospital to receive care. Hispanic patients who initially came to a non-PCI capable hospital were 5.6% less likely to be transferred to another hospital.
“These are extremely large differences,” Hsuan said. “They all added up to explain why previous studies found a higher mortality rate in STEMI patients who are Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black compared to patients who are white.”
According to Hsuan, the study highlights areas where policymakers — both state and federal lawmakers, along with hospital administrators — could potentially focus their attention, such as whether a STEMI patient received a PCI when they initially arrived at a PCI-capable hospital and, if transferred, whether the patients received a PCI at the transfer hospital.
Because all data were collected in Florida, the findings of this study cannot necessarily be generalized more broadly across the United States. However, Florida is the third most populous state in the nation, making this an issue that likely affects millions of Americans, according to Hsuan. More research is needed to determine the drivers of these disparities, which Hsuan theorized could be any number of factors including insurance differences, hospital availability or geographic location.
This study is part of a larger line of research for Hsuan, examining the process and quality of transfer care nationwide.
“While this study focused on racial and ethnic disparities, it has large implications for everyone’s quality of care,” Hsuan said. “Differences by demographics highlight that emergency care can be improved for everyone. The key takeaway is that people are not receiving the care recommended by physicians and medical associations, and this study was a big step in identifying the why so we can begin closing the gap and ensure all patients receive appropriate treatment.”
Other Penn State authors on the paper include David J. Vanness, professor of health policy and administration; Haoyu Bi, doctoral candidate in the Department of Health Policy and Administration at Penn State; and Jeannette Rogowski, professor of health policy and administration.
Other authors include Michelle P. Lin, associate professor of emergency medicine at Stanford University; Alexis Zebrowski, executive director of data strategy at Mount Sinai Health System; Renee Y. Hsia, professor and associate chair of health services research at the University of California San Francisco; Brendan G. Carr, Chief Executive Officer of Mount Sinai Health System; Eric Wei, CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue and professor of emergency medicine at the Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine; and David G. Buckler, director of Emergency Medicine Data and Analytics at the Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine.
The National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health, the Social Science Research Institute and the College of Health and Human Development at Penn State supported this work.
At Penn State, researchers are solving real problems that impact the health, safety and quality of life of people across the commonwealth, the nation and around the world.
For decades, federal support for research has fueled innovation that makes our country safer, our industries more competitive and our economy stronger. Recent federal funding cuts threaten this progress.
Learn more about the implications of federal funding cuts to our future at Research or Regress.
END
Not all heart attack patients receive the same type of care, researchers find
Racial minorities are less likely to receive the recommended treatment and experience higher mortality rates, according to a new study in Florida led by researchers at Penn State
2025-09-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Sugary drinks may increase risk of metastasis in advanced colorectal cancer
2025-09-19
Preclinical study provides first direct evidence linking colorectal cancer metastasis to the glucose-fructose blend found in sugar-sweetened beverages
Metastasis is the leading cause of death among patients with colorectal cancer
The combination of glucose and fructose, found in most sodas and fruit juices, activates the SORD enzyme, fueling cancer cell migration and metastasis
Study suggests cutting back on sugary drinks could help slow cancer progression in patients with colorectal cancer and points to possible new treatment targets
HOUSTON, SEPTEMBER 19, 2025 – A ...
Hertz Foundation Entrepreneurship Award goes to Vivek Nair for AI cybersecurity startup
2025-09-19
Hertz Fellow Vivek Nair thinks that traditional cybersecurity approaches don’t cut it when it comes to the world of rapidly advancing AI systems. His startup company, Multifactor, aims to provide new security solutions that are designed from the ground up to protect consumers and businesses from AI-related data breaches.
Nair has now won funds from the Hertz Foundation via the Harold Newman and David Galas Entrepreneurial Initiative, which will be used to support the development of multiple new cybersecurity products aimed at both companies and individual ...
Inhaling cannabis may greatly increase your risk of getting asthma
2025-09-19
Inhaling Cannabis May Greatly Increase Your Risk of Getting Asthma
If you’re looking to reduce your chances of developing lung disease, say experts at UC San Francisco, then it may be smart to avoid inhaling cannabis.
A new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that inhaling marijuana every day is associated with a 44% increased chance of developing asthma. It also increased the odds of developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) by 27%.
The COPD risk may be understated, since the disease takes decades to develop, and the researchers ...
Improving question answering over building codes by evaluating retrievers and fine-tuning LLMs
2025-09-19
Researchers have focussed on building a QA system which can answer query of user from building code and reduces the laborious traditional way of manual querying. One possible solution to build a robust QA system is to utilise the power of Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG). Researchers have explored the potential of several retrieval methods and efficiency of Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) to fine-tune Large Language Models (LLMs). Retrievers and LLMs are core component of a RAG system, and their performance affects ...
Possible breakthrough in the development of effective biomaterials
2025-09-19
Many hopes rested on so-called tissue engineering: With the help of stem cells, skin and other organs could be grown, thereby enabling better wound healing and better transplants. Although some of this is already a reality, the level expected around 20 years ago has not yet been achieved because the stem cells do not always bind to the required host material as they should in theory. An international research team led by chemist Professor Shikha Dhiman from Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has now found the reason for this: "Whether an interaction ...
Federal grants support research on AI-driven protein design
2025-09-19
Two projects at the University of California, Davis, that use artificial intelligence to design and engineer proteins for industrial and health applications have been funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF).
The grants are part of a $32 million investment in AI and protein engineering announced Aug. 7 by the NSF Directorate for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships (NSF TIP). Both teams are affiliated with the UC Davis Innovation Institute for Food and Health in collaboration with industry partners. Total funding to UC Davis will be about $1 million over three years.
The two grants are among five announced by NSF that aim to ...
Experts explore AI’s future in health care at UTA
2025-09-19
The University of Texas at Arlington will bring together experts and innovators at the fifth annual Texas Health Informatics Alliance Conference, exploring how artificial intelligence is shaping the future of health care.
The conference will take place Friday, Sept. 26, in the Bluebonnet Ballroom of the University Center. This year’s theme, ALL IN: Practice of Trustworthy and Responsible AI Operations in Health Care, reflects its focus on ethical, effective and patient-centered AI applications.
“Our conference has become a must-attend event for anyone in health informatics,” said Marion Ball, Presidential ...
The self-taught seismologist: Monitoring earthquakes from optic fibers with AI
2025-09-19
Seismology is undergoing significant change with the rise of Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), a fast-growing technology that leverages existing fiber-optic cables—including those used for the Internet—into ultra-dense seismic networks with meter-scale sensor spacing. DAS provides a scalable and cost-effective way to monitor earthquakes from local to global scales, but it also poses a pressing challenge: the massive volume of data produced outpaces human capacity to analyze. For example, ...
Poverty and social disadvantage in women and men and fertility outcomes
2025-09-19
About The Study: The findings of this cohort study suggest that poverty and social disadvantage, characterized by low educational level and household income among both women and men, were associated with lower fecundability (defined as the per-month probability of conceiving) and increased risks of subfertility (defined as a time to pregnancy or the duration of actively pursuing pregnancy of more than 12 months or use of assisted reproductive technology) but not with miscarriage risk. Further studies are needed to identify the underlying and explanatory mechanisms associated with fertility outcomes and the potential for novel public health strategies for couples desiring pregnancy.
Corresponding ...
Modeling the impact of MMR vaccination strategies on measles outbreaks in Texas
2025-09-19
About The Study: The findings of this study highlight the critical role of improving measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccination coverage to prevent large-scale measles outbreaks, particularly in regions with declining immunization rates.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kaiming Bi, Ph.D., email kaiming.bi@uth.tmc.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.3992)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Bio-based PEF shows exceptional hydrogen barrier potential for high-pressure storage
When metabolism provides more than fuel
New research shows how plant roots bend and growth downward toward gravity
Alpha cells moonlight as secret GLP-1 factories
Quantum chemistry: Making key simulation approach more accurate
Sandia team creates X-ray images of the future
Bigscale pomfret are an ocean enigma
Not all heart attack patients receive the same type of care, researchers find
Sugary drinks may increase risk of metastasis in advanced colorectal cancer
Hertz Foundation Entrepreneurship Award goes to Vivek Nair for AI cybersecurity startup
Inhaling cannabis may greatly increase your risk of getting asthma
Improving question answering over building codes by evaluating retrievers and fine-tuning LLMs
Possible breakthrough in the development of effective biomaterials
Federal grants support research on AI-driven protein design
Experts explore AI’s future in health care at UTA
The self-taught seismologist: Monitoring earthquakes from optic fibers with AI
Poverty and social disadvantage in women and men and fertility outcomes
Modeling the impact of MMR vaccination strategies on measles outbreaks in Texas
How an ant’s nose knows
Wildfires are changing the air we breathe—here’s what that means for your health
Quantum scars boost electron transport and drive the development of microchips
JMIR Publications announces that Witten/Herdecke University joins Flat-Fee Unlimited OA Publishing Partnership through ZBMed
JMIR Publications announces expansion of members subscribed to Jisc Unlimited Open Access Partnership
Consuming more legumes and less red and processed meat may have a surprisingly positive impact on men’s health
Achalasia treatment: A review of per-oral endoscopic myotomy and laparoscopic heller myotomy
American Academy of Pediatrics hosts 2025 National Conference & Exhibition in Denver
New SCAI initiative targets faster shock diagnosis and care with ‘door to lactate clearance’
MoBluRF: A framework for creating sharp 4D reconstructions from blurry videos
Community management effectively protects millions of hectares of Amazonian forest
No single solution for gastroparesis — patients need personalized care
[Press-News.org] Not all heart attack patients receive the same type of care, researchers findRacial minorities are less likely to receive the recommended treatment and experience higher mortality rates, according to a new study in Florida led by researchers at Penn State