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Racial and ethnic disparities in emergency department transfers to public hospitals.

Authors :
Hsuan, Charleen
Vanness, David J.
Zebrowski, Alexis
Carr, Brendan G.
Norton, Edward C.
Buckler, David G.
Wang, Yinan
Leslie, Douglas L.
Dunham, Eleanor F.
Rogowski, Jeannette A.
Source :
Health Services Research; Apr2024, Vol. 59 Issue 2, p1-14, 14p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: To examine racial/ethnic differences in emergency department (ED) transfers to public hospitals and factors explaining these differences. Data Sources and Study Setting: ED and inpatient data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project for Florida (2010–2019); American Hospital Association Annual Survey (2009–2018). Study Design: Logistic regression examined race/ethnicity and payer on the likelihood of transfer to a public hospital among transferred ED patients. The base model was controlled for patient and hospital characteristics and year fixed effects. Models II and III added urbanicity and hospital referral region (HRR), respectively. Model IV used hospital fixed effects, which compares patients within the same hospital. Models V and VI stratified Model IV by payer and condition, respectively. Conditions were classified as emergency care sensitive conditions (ECSCs), where transfer is protocolized, and non‐ECSCs. We reported marginal effects at the means. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: We examined 1,265,588 adult ED patients transferred from 187 hospitals. Principal Findings: Black patients were more likely to be transferred to public hospitals compared with White patients in all models except ECSC patients within the same initial hospital (except trauma). Black patients were 0.5–1.3 percentage points (pp) more likely to be transferred to public hospitals than White patients in the same hospital with the same payer. In the base model, Hispanic patients were more likely to be transferred to public hospitals compared with White patients, but this difference reversed after controlling for HRR. Hispanic patients were − 0.6 pp to −1.2 pp less likely to be transferred to public hospitals than White patients in the same hospital with the same payer. Conclusions: Large population‐level differences in whether ED patients of different races/ethnicities were transferred to public hospitals were largely explained by hospital market and the initial hospital, suggesting that they may play a larger role in explaining differences in transfer to public hospitals, compared with other external factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00179124
Volume :
59
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Health Services Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175870270
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.14276