Social Disadvantage and Inequity in Access to Pediatric Critical Care Services for Children Living Remote from a Children's Hospital

IF 0.5 Q4 PEDIATRICS
Jordan L. Klein, M. Spaeder, Ayush Doshi, Gary Y. Fang, Deborah Jeannean Carver
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Abstract

Regionalization of health care has created geographical distance between pediatric specialty services and children, with the potential for disparities in access to care. We investigated the association of state-level area deprivation index (S-ADI), a measure of socioeconomic disadvantage, and characteristics and outcomes in a cohort of children requiring unplanned hospital transfer to a quaternary care pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). We conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study of children requiring unplanned hospital transfer to the PICU at the University of Virginia Children's Hospital from July 1, 2019 to December 31, 2020, excluding planned transfers, transfers from another intensive care unit, and patients whose address could not be associated with an S-ADI. We collected demographic and clinical data as well as the S-ADI, an ordinal variable ranging from 1 to 10 with 10 representing the most disadvantage. We observed no differences in S-ADI based on patient sex, age, history of chronic medical conditions, or need for a medical device (tracheostomy, home ventilator, surgical feeding tube, cerebrospinal fluid shunt). We also did not observe differences in PICU or hospital length of stay based on S-ADI. We did observe for every one-point increase in S-ADI there was an associated increase of 8.6 miles (p < 0.001) in patient travel distance. Among patients from a higher S-ADI area, we observed increased severity of illness on PICU admission (p = 0.02) and case fatality as compared with patients from a lower S-ADI area (11 vs. 1.9%, p = 0.038). Children traveling the farthest for subspeciality pediatric critical care at our hospital had higher measures of socioeconomic disadvantage and severity of illness.
远离儿童医院的儿童在获得儿科重症监护服务方面的社会劣势和不公平现象
医疗保健的区域化造成了儿科专科服务与儿童之间的地理距离,从而可能导致医疗服务的不均衡。我们调查了需要意外转院至四级护理儿科重症监护病房(PICU)的儿童队列中州级地区贫困指数(S-ADI)(一种衡量社会经济劣势的指标)与特征和结果的关联。我们对2019年7月1日至2020年12月31日期间需要意外转院至弗吉尼亚大学儿童医院PICU的儿童进行了一项单中心回顾性队列研究,其中不包括计划内转院、从其他重症监护室转院以及地址无法与S-ADI相关联的患者。我们收集了人口统计学和临床数据以及 S-ADI,S-ADI 是一个从 1 到 10 的序数变量,10 代表最不利的情况。我们没有发现 S-ADI 因患者性别、年龄、慢性病史或医疗设备需求(气管造口术、家用呼吸机、手术喂食管、脑脊液分流术)而存在差异。我们也没有观察到基于 S-ADI 的 PICU 或住院时间差异。我们确实观察到,S-ADI 每增加一分,患者的旅行距离就会相应增加 8.6 英里(p < 0.001)。与来自 S-ADI 指数较低地区的患者相比,我们观察到来自 S-ADI 指数较高地区的患者在进入 PICU 时的病情严重程度更高(p = 0.02),病死率也更高(11% 对 1.9%,p = 0.038)。在本医院接受儿科重症监护亚专科治疗的最远儿童的社会经济劣势和病情严重程度更高。
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14.30%
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60
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