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Advance Care Planning and Treatment Intensity Before Death Among Black, Hispanic, and White Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19.

Authors :
Barnato, Amber E.
Johnson, Gregory R.
Birkmeyer, John D.
Skinner, Jonathan S.
O'Malley, Allistair James
Birkmeyer, Nancy J. O.
Source :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine; 2022 Supplement, Vol. 37, p1996-2002, 7p, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Black and Hispanic people are more likely to contract COVID-19, require hospitalization, and die than White people due to differences in exposures, comorbidity risk, and healthcare access. Objective: To examine the association of race and ethnicity with treatment decisions and intensity for patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Design: Retrospective cohort analysis of manually abstracted electronic medical records. Patients: 7,997 patients (62% non-Hispanic White, 16% non-Black Hispanic, and 23% Black) hospitalized for COVID-19 at 135 community hospitals between March and June 2020 Main Measures: Advance care planning (ACP), do not resuscitate (DNR) orders, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, mechanical ventilation (MV), and in-hospital mortality. Among decedents, we classified the mode of death based on treatment intensity and code status as treatment limitation (no MV/DNR), treatment withdrawal (MV/DNR), maximal life support (MV/no DNR), or other (no MV/no DNR). Key Results: Adjusted in-hospital mortality was similar between White (8%) and Black patients (9%, OR=1.1, 95% CI=0.9–1.4, p=0.254), and lower among Hispanic patients (6%, OR=0.7, 95% CI=0.6–1.0, p=0.032). Black and Hispanic patients were significantly more likely to be treated in the ICU (White 23%, Hispanic 27%, Black 28%) and to receive mechanical ventilation (White 12%, Hispanic 17%, Black 16%). The groups had similar rates of ACP (White 12%, Hispanic 12%, Black 11%), but Black and Hispanic patients were less likely to have a DNR order (White 13%, Hispanic 8%, Black 7%). Among decedents, there were significant differences in mode of death by race/ethnicity (treatment limitation: White 39%, Hispanic 17% (p=0.001), Black 18% (p<0.0001); treatment withdrawal: White 26%, Hispanic 43% (p=0.002), Black 28% (p=0.542); and maximal life support: White 21%, Hispanic 26% (p=0.308), Black 36% (p<0.0001)). Conclusions: Hospitalized Black and Hispanic COVID-19 patients received greater treatment intensity than White patients. This may have simultaneously mitigated disparities in in-hospital mortality while increasing burdensome treatment near death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08848734
Volume :
37
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157431394
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07530-4