Withstanding the COVID19 pandemic - A tertiary children’s hospital’s commitment to equitable care

Alicia D. Menchaca, C. Style, Mehak Chawla, Allie Kouche, Maria Burdjalov, Tyler A. Kyhl, B. Nwomeh, O. Olutoye
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Abstract

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic led to perceived increases in the rates of complicated appendicitis. Multiple studies have shown, both in adults and children, higher rates of complicated appendicitis among patients with Medicaid insurance. At our institution, we previously found that, contrary to statewide and nationwide findings, no differences in complicated appendicitis rates existed based on age, sex, race, insurance status, socioeconomic status, and income level. The purpose of this study was to determine if the COVID-19 pandemic altered our previous findings. Methods: The electronic medical record of a large tertiary children’s hospital was queried for all patients with ICD 10 appendicitis codes from 1/1/2017-12/31/2020. Patient records were reviewed to determine complicated (defined as having either a hole in the appendix, extraluminal fecalith, well-formed abscess, or frank stool in the abdomen) vs. uncomplicated appendicitis. Demographic information including age, sex, race, ethnicity, and insurance type were collected. Rates of complicated appendicitis were compared across years. Correlation between rates of complicated appendicitis and demographic variables was determined both within and across years. Results: The rate of complicated appendicitis was not significantly different across years from 2017-2020. There was no significant difference in the rate of complicated appendicitis based on age, sex, race, ethnicity, or insurance type. Conclusion: While some U.S. centers and those abroad found a significantly higher rate of complicated appendicitis in 2020 compared to prior years, the rate of complicated appendicitis at a large tertiary children’s hospital did not change during the pandemic. No disparities exist based on age, sex, race, ethnicity, or insurance type.
抵御 COVID19 大流行--一家三级儿童医院对公平护理的承诺
导言:COVID-19 大流行导致复杂性阑尾炎发病率明显上升。多项研究表明,在成人和儿童中,有医疗补助保险的患者患复杂性阑尾炎的比例较高。在我院,我们曾发现,与全州和全国范围的研究结果相反,复杂性阑尾炎的发病率并不因年龄、性别、种族、保险状况、社会经济地位和收入水平的不同而存在差异。本研究旨在确定 COVID-19 大流行是否改变了我们之前的研究结果:方法:对一家大型三级儿童医院的电子病历进行了查询,以了解在 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 12 月 31 日期间所有带有 ICD 10 阑尾炎代码的患者。对患者病历进行了审查,以确定复杂性阑尾炎(定义为阑尾有洞、腔外有粪石、脓肿形成良好或腹中有粪便)与非复杂性阑尾炎。收集的人口统计学信息包括年龄、性别、种族、民族和保险类型。比较了不同年份的复杂性阑尾炎发病率。确定了各年度内和各年度间复杂性阑尾炎发病率与人口统计学变量之间的相关性:从 2017 年到 2020 年,不同年份的复杂性阑尾炎发病率没有显著差异。根据年龄、性别、种族、民族或保险类型,复杂性阑尾炎的发病率没有明显差异:虽然美国和国外的一些中心发现 2020 年的复杂性阑尾炎发病率明显高于往年,但一家大型三级儿童医院的复杂性阑尾炎发病率在大流行期间并无变化。不存在基于年龄、性别、种族、民族或保险类型的差异。
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