In-Hospital Mortality by Race and Ethnicity Among Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients Using Data From the US National COVID Cohort Collaborative

Antonije Lazic , J. Mick Tilford , Bradley C. Martin , Mandana Rezaeiahari , Anthony Goudie , Ahmad Baghal , Melody Greer
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Abstract

Background

Studies examining racial and ethnic disparities in-hospital mortality for patients hospitalized with COVID-19 had mixed results. Findings from patients within academic medical centers (AMCs) are lacking, but important given the role of AMCs in improving health equity.

Objective

The purpose of this study is to assess whether minority patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in National COVID Cohort Collaborative (N3C) institutions, which consist predominantly of AMCs, have higher mortality rates relative to White patients.

Design

A retrospective analysis of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 was performed. Logistic regression analysis was used to test the primary hypothesis. A separate analysis tested whether there were differences by race and ethnicity during the delta variant phase of the pandemic.

Patients

All hospitalized patients with COVID-19 who were above 17 years old were categorized by race and ethnicity as Black, Hispanic, Asian, White, Other, and Unknown.

Main Measures

In-hospital mortality for patients with a known hospital outcome formed the primary outcome measure. Race and ethnicity were the primary independent variables.

Key Results

There were 103,702 in-hospital Covid-19 admissions with 14,207 (13.7%) hospital deaths. Unadjusted in-hospital mortality for White patients was approximately 26% higher than for Black patients. After multivariable adjustment, none of the racial and ethnic groups had significantly different odds of in-hospital mortality compared to White patients. Only Hispanic patients had an odds ratio greater than one that was insignificant (OR = 1.06; 95% CI = 0.92-1.20). Findings for the delta variant phase were similar with the exception of the unknown category (OR = 1.90; 95% CI = 1.05-3.46).

Conclusions

Disparities in-hospital mortality outcomes by race or ethnicity were not found in COVID-19 patients hospitalized in AMCs. AMCs are expected to lead health delivery systems in eliminating disparities associated with structural racism. The null findings are consistent with the hypothesis of no difference in hospital outcomes by race or ethnicity in academic medical centers.

利用美国国家 COVID 队列协作组的数据,按种族和族裔分列 COVID-19 住院病人的住院死亡率
背景对COVID-19住院患者院内死亡率的种族和民族差异的研究结果不一。本研究旨在评估在国家 COVID 队列协作(N3C)机构(主要由 AMC 组成)住院的 COVID-19 少数民族患者的死亡率是否高于白人患者。采用逻辑回归分析来检验主要假设。患者所有 17 岁以上的 COVID-19 住院患者均按种族和族裔分为黑人、西班牙裔、亚裔、白人、其他族裔和未知族裔。种族和民族是主要的自变量。主要结果共有 103,702 例 Covid-19 住院患者,其中 14,207 例(13.7%)在医院死亡。白人患者未经调整的院内死亡率比黑人患者高出约26%。经多变量调整后,与白人患者相比,所有种族和族裔群体的院内死亡几率均无明显差异。只有西班牙裔患者的几率比大于1,但并不显著(OR = 1.06; 95% CI = 0.92-1.20)。除了未知类别(OR = 1.90; 95% CI = 1.05-3.46)外,delta 变异阶段的结果与此类似。AMC有望引领医疗服务系统消除与结构性种族主义相关的差异。无效研究结果与学术医疗中心中不同种族或族裔住院结果无差异的假设一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American journal of medicine open
American journal of medicine open Medicine and Dentistry (General)
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