Segregation in hospital care for Medicare beneficiaries by race and ethnicity and dual-eligible status from 2013 to 2021.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Alina Kung, Bian Liu, Louisa W Holaday, Karen McKendrick, Yingtong Chen, Albert L Siu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: To examine the extent of segregation between hospitals for Medicare beneficiaries by race, ethnicity, and dual-eligible status over time.

Data sources and study setting: We used Medicare inpatient hospital provider data for fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries, and the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care from 2013 to 2021 nationwide, for hospital referral regions (HRRs), and for and hospital service areas (HSAs).

Study design: We conducted time trend analysis with dissimilarity indices (DIs) for Black (DI-Black), Hispanic (DI-Hispanic), non-White (including Black, Hispanic, and other non-White) (DI-non-White), and dual-eligible (DI-Dual) beneficiaries. DIs between hospitals were contextualized and correlated with population compositions and residential DIs.

Data collection/extraction methods: We included 3177 hospitals with more than 250 Medicare FFS beneficiaries discharged per year. We cross-linked data on hospital-level patient race, ethnicity, and dual-eligible status with geographic data and examined time trends using linear mixed models.

Principal findings: Nationwide DIs ranged from 0.23 to 0.53. HRRs and HSAs generally had low segregation (DI medians: 0.08-0.19, highest among Black, then non-White, Hispanic, and dual-eligible beneficiaries). However, some HRRs and HSAs had moderate or high segregation (DI-Black >0.30 in 19.1% of HRRs and 5.8% of HSAs; DI-non-White >0.30 for two HRRs with high American Indian/Alaska Native populations). Time trends indicated small declines in segregation from 2013 to 2021 (0.15%-0.30% per year; all p < 0.001). DI-Dual correlated moderately with non-White populations.

Conclusions: For Medicare FFS, we observe generally low and slightly declining levels of segregation across HRRs and HSAs, with notable exceptions. Improving race reporting and contextualizing select areas of higher segregation with their hospital and residential population compositions can help frame and understand health inequities. Interpretation of HRR-level DI may require additional historical, demographic, and spatial context due to its potential to oversimplify, overstate, or obscure segregation. Future work should identify drivers and mitigators of segregation, including sorting patterns among health systems.

2013年至2021年,医疗保险受益人在医院护理方面按种族和族裔以及双重资格身份进行隔离。
目的:研究医院对医疗保险受益人按种族、民族和双重资格身份隔离的程度。数据来源和研究设置:我们使用2013年至2021年全国范围内的医疗保险住院医院提供者数据和达特茅斯医疗保健地图集,用于医院转诊地区(HRRs)和医院服务区(HSAs)。研究设计:我们对黑人(DI-Black)、西班牙裔(DI-Hispanic)、非白人(包括黑人、西班牙裔和其他非白人)(di -非白人)和双重资格(DI-Dual)受益人进行了不同指数(DIs)的时间趋势分析。医院之间的DIs与人口组成和住宅DIs相关。数据收集/提取方法:我们纳入了3177家医院,每年有250多名医疗保险FFS受益人出院。我们将医院级别患者的种族、民族和双重资格的数据与地理数据交叉链接,并使用线性混合模型检查时间趋势。主要发现:全国di范围从0.23到0.53。hrr和HSAs通常具有较低的隔离(DI中位数:0.08-0.19,黑人最高,其次是非白人、西班牙裔和双重资格受益人)。然而,部分hrr和HSAs存在中度或高度分离(DI-Black >.30在19.1%的hrr和5.8%的HSAs中存在;di -非白人bb0 0.30对于两个高美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民的hrr)。时间趋势表明,从2013年到2021年,种族隔离现象略有下降(每年0.15%-0.30%;结论:对于医疗保险FFS,我们观察到hrr和HSAs之间的隔离水平普遍较低且略有下降,但有明显的例外。改进种族报告并将隔离程度较高的特定地区与其医院和居住人口组成联系起来,有助于构建和理解卫生不公平现象。对hrr水平DI的解释可能需要额外的历史、人口统计和空间背景,因为它有可能过度简化、夸大或模糊隔离。未来的工作应确定隔离的驱动因素和缓解因素,包括卫生系统之间的分类模式。
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来源期刊
Health Services Research
Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
193
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Services Research (HSR) is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal that provides researchers and public and private policymakers with the latest research findings, methods, and concepts related to the financing, organization, delivery, evaluation, and outcomes of health services. Rated as one of the top journals in the fields of health policy and services and health care administration, HSR publishes outstanding articles reporting the findings of original investigations that expand knowledge and understanding of the wide-ranging field of health care and that will help to improve the health of individuals and communities.
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