1. Neighborhood Income Disparities in Unplanned Hospital Admission and In-Hospital Outcomes Among Children with Congenital Heart Disease
- Author
-
Ghimire, Laxmi V, Khanal, Sagya, Torabyan, Zareh, El-Rahi, Hiba, Cong, Catherine, Chou, Fu-Sheng, Aljohani, Othman A, and Moon-Grady, Anita J
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Congenital Heart Disease ,Pediatric ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Patient Safety ,Good Health and Well Being ,Congenital heart disease ,Unplanned admission ,Elective admission ,Socioeconomic disparity ,United States ,ICD-10 codes ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Unplanned admissions are associated with worse clinical outcomes and increased hospital resource utilization. We hypothesized that children with congenital heart disease (CHD) from lower-income neighborhoods have higher rates of unplanned hospital admissions and greater resource utilization. Utilizing the Kids' Inpatient Database (2016 and 2019), we included children under 21 years of age with CHD, excluding newborn hospitalizations. CHD cases were categorized into simple lesions, complex biventricular lesions, and single ventricle lesions. Admissions were classified as surgical or non-surgical. A logistic regression model assessed the risk of unplanned hospital admission, mortality, and resource utilization across different neighborhood income levels. Out of 4,722,684 admitted children (excluding newborn hospitalizations), 199,757 had CHD and met the study criteria: 121,626 with mild CHD, 61,639 with complex biventricular lesions, and 16,462 with single ventricle lesions. Surgical admissions comprised 20% (n = 39,694). In the CHD cohort, 27% had planned admissions, while 73% were unplanned. Mortality was higher in unplanned admissions compared to planned admissions (3.0 vs. 0.93%, P
- Published
- 2024