农村地区对肠梗阻治疗费用种族差异的影响

IF 1.4 Q3 SURGERY
Corynn Branche , Nikhil Chervu MD MS , Giselle Porter BS , Amulya Vadlakonda BS , Sara Sakowitz MS MPH , Konmal Ali , Saad Mallick MD , Peyman Benharash MD
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景黑人种族与小肠梗阻(SBO)手术后资源利用率增加有关。虽然之前的文献也同样证明了城市和农村机构之间的差异,但按种族界定农村对资源利用的影响的工作还很有限。方法采用 2016-2020 年全国住院病人样本,识别因 SBO 非选择性入院后接受粘连溶解手术的成人。主要终点是住院费用。其他结果包括手术延迟(≥住院第 3 天)、住院时间(LOS)和非家庭出院。我们建立了回归模型来确定黑人种族和乡村地区对相关结果的影响,并通过交互项来检验黑人种族与乡村地区的递增关系。结果 在估计的 132390 名患者中,有 11.4% 在年均 377 家乡村医院(占医疗机构的 18.5%)接受治疗。经过调整后,与其他医院相比,农村医院的成本更高(β + 4900 美元,95 % 置信区间 [CI] [4200, 5700])。然而,农村地区与手术延迟几率降低(调整后比值比 [AOR] 0.76,CI[0.69, 0.85])、LOS 减少(β -1.66 天,CI[-1.99, -1.36])和非家庭出院(AOR 0.78,CI[0.70, 0.87])相关。虽然白人患者在城市中心的费用明显降低(26,100 美元 [25,800-26,300] vs 31,000 美元 [30,300-31,700] ),但黑人患者的费用却没有明显降低(30,100 美元 [29,400-30,700] vs 30,800 美元 [29,300-32,400] )。未来的工作重点应放在针对具体环境的干预措施上,以解决每个社区内造成差异的因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of rurality on racial disparities in costs of bowel obstruction treatment

Background

Black race has been associated with increased resource utilization after operation for small bowel obstruction (SBO). While prior literature has similarly demonstrated differences between urban and rural institutions, limited work has defined the impact of rurality on resource utilization by race.

Methods

The 2016–2020 National Inpatient Sample was used to identify adults undergoing adhesiolysis after non-elective admission for SBO. The primary endpoint was hospitalization costs. Additional outcomes included surgical delay (≥ hospital day 3), length of stay (LOS), and nonhome discharge. Regression models were developed to identify the impact of Black race and rurality on the outcomes of interest with an interaction term to examine the incremental association of Black race on rurality.

Results

Of an estimated 132,390 patients, 11.4 % were treated at an annual average of 377 rural hospitals (18.5 % of institutions). After adjustment, rural hospitals had higher costs (β + $4900, 95 % Confidence Interval [CI] [4200, 5700]), compared to others. However, rurality was associated with reduced odds of surgical delay (Adjusted Odds Ratio [AOR] 0. 76, CI[0.69, 0.85]), decreased LOS (β −1.66 days, CI[−1.99, −1.36]), and nonhome discharge (AOR 0.78, CI[0.70, 0.87]). While White patients experienced significant cost reductions at urban centers ($26,100 [25,800-26,300] vs $31,000 [30,300-31,700]), this was not noted for Black patients ($30,100 [29,400-30,700] vs $30,800 [29,300-32,400]).

Conclusions

We found that Black patients do not benefit from the same cost protection afforded by urban settings as White patients after operative SBO admission. Future work should focus on setting-specific interventions to address drivers of disparities within each community.

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CiteScore
1.30
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