Increasing Omission of Race and Ethnicity in a National Surgical Database.

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 SURGERY
Kevin G Hu, Jacqueline Ihnat, K Lynn Zhao, SeungJu J Oh, Jeremy A Goss, Neil Parikh, Alexander Kammien, Soraya Fereydooni, Paris D Butler, Michael Alperovich
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Accurate data collection on race and ethnicity is critical to detecting and characterizing disparities in surgical care. This study explores the prevalence and impact of missing race and ethnicity data in the NSQIP-Pediatric (NSQIP-P) database.

Study design: NSQIP-P from 2016-2020 was assessed for patients who were missing data for race (RM), ethnicity (EM), or both (BM). Changes in proportion of RM, EM, and BM patients were assessed with Cochran-Armitage tests. Surgical outcomes were modeled using linear mixed-effects models, treating CPT codes as random effects. Models were bootstrapped with 1000 iterations for each outcome.

Results: Of 596,571 patients, 18.0% were RM, 10.9% were EM, and 8.3% were BM. BM patients increased in proportion from 5.7% in 2016 to 12.1% in 2020 (p < 0.0001). Outcomes which differed statistically significantly were worse in RM than non-RM patients. Multivariate analysis found that BM patients had longer hospital lengths-of-stay than non-BM patients (b = 0.5 days, p < 0.001). BM patients also had higher odds of readmission (OR = 1.22 [1.02-1.46]) and any complication (OR = 1.27 [1.03-1.59]).

Conclusion: NSQIP-P exhibits a concerning increase in missing race and ethnicity data that has not been previously described in other literature or database documentation. Controlling for surgery type and patient demographics, patients exhibited worse outcomes with respect to hospital lengths-of-stay and rates of both readmission and any complication. Further work is necessary to determine the cause of this missing data and provide guidance for researchers examining surgical disparities utilizing NSQIP-P.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
5.80%
发文量
1515
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS) is a monthly journal publishing peer-reviewed original contributions on all aspects of surgery. These contributions include, but are not limited to, original clinical studies, review articles, and experimental investigations with clear clinical relevance. In general, case reports are not considered for publication. As the official scientific journal of the American College of Surgeons, JACS has the goal of providing its readership the highest quality rapid retrieval of information relevant to surgeons.
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