Examination of the Black-White racial disparity in severe maternal morbidity among Georgia deliveries, 2016 to 2020

E. Kathleen Adams PhD , Michael R. Kramer PhD , Peter J. Joski MSPH , Marissa Coloske MPH, MA , Anne L. Dunlop MD, MPH
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No such studies have focused on the US Southeast, where racial disparities are widest, and few have examined the relative contribution of hospital, residential, and maternal factors.</p></div><div><h3>OBJECTIVE</h3><p>This study aimed to estimate the portion of Georgia's Black-White gap in severe maternal morbidity during delivery through 42 days postpartum explained by hospital, residential, and maternal factors.</p></div><div><h3>STUDY DESIGN</h3><p>Using linked Georgia hospital discharge, birth, and fetal death records for 2016 through 2020, we identified 413,124 deliveries to non-Hispanic White (229,357; 56%) or Black (183,767; 44%) individuals. We linked hospital data from the American Hospital Association and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and area data from the Area Resource File and American Community Survey. We identified severe maternal morbidity indicator conditions during delivery or subsequent hospitalizations through 42 days postpartum. Using race-specific logistic models followed by a decomposition technique, we estimated the portion of the Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap explained by the following: (1) sociodemographic factors (age, education, marital status, and nativity), (2) medical conditions (diabetes mellitus, gestational diabetes, chronic hypertension, gestational hypertension or preeclampsia, and smoking), (3) obstetrical factors (singleton or multiple, and birth order); (4) access to care (no or third trimester care, and payer), (5) hospital factors that are time-varying (delivery volume, deliveries per full-time equivalent nurse, doctor communication, patient safety, and adverse event composite score) or measured time-invariant characteristics (ownership, profit status, religious affiliation, teaching status, and perinatal level), and (6) residential factors (county urban/rural classification, percent uninsured women of reproductive age, obstetrician-gynecologists per women of reproductive age, number of federally-qualified and community health centers, medically-underserved area [yes/no], and census tract neighborhood deprivation index). We estimated models with and without hospital fixed-effects, which account for unobserved time-invariant hospital characteristics such as within-hospital care processes or unmeasured hospital-specific factors.</p></div><div><h3>RESULTS</h3><p>There was 1.8 times the rate of severe maternal morbidity per 100 discharges among non-Hispanic Black (3.15) than among White (1.73) individuals, with an explained proportion of 30.4% in models without and 49.8% in models with hospital fixed-effects. In the latter, hospital fixed-effects explained the largest portion of the Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap (15.1%) followed by access to care (14.9%) and sociodemographic factors (14.4%), with residential factors being protective for Black individuals (-7.5%). Smaller proportions were explained by medical (5.6%), obstetrical (4.0%), and time-varying hospital factors (3.2%). Within each category, the largest explanatory portion was payer type (13.3%) for access to care, marital status (10.3%) for sociodemographic, gestational hypertension (3.3%) for medical, birth order (3.6%) for obstetrical, and patient safety indicator (3.1%) for time-varying hospital factors.</p></div><div><h3>CONCLUSION</h3><p>Models with hospital fixed-effects explain a greater proportion of Georgia's Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap than models without them, thereby supporting the point that differences in care processes or other unmeasured factors within the same hospital translate into racial differences in severe maternal morbidity during delivery through 42 days postpartum. Research is needed to discern and ameliorate sources of within-hospital differences in care. 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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Studies find that delivery hospital explains a significant portion of the Black-White gap in severe maternal morbidity. No such studies have focused on the US Southeast, where racial disparities are widest, and few have examined the relative contribution of hospital, residential, and maternal factors.

OBJECTIVE

This study aimed to estimate the portion of Georgia's Black-White gap in severe maternal morbidity during delivery through 42 days postpartum explained by hospital, residential, and maternal factors.

STUDY DESIGN

Using linked Georgia hospital discharge, birth, and fetal death records for 2016 through 2020, we identified 413,124 deliveries to non-Hispanic White (229,357; 56%) or Black (183,767; 44%) individuals. We linked hospital data from the American Hospital Association and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and area data from the Area Resource File and American Community Survey. We identified severe maternal morbidity indicator conditions during delivery or subsequent hospitalizations through 42 days postpartum. Using race-specific logistic models followed by a decomposition technique, we estimated the portion of the Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap explained by the following: (1) sociodemographic factors (age, education, marital status, and nativity), (2) medical conditions (diabetes mellitus, gestational diabetes, chronic hypertension, gestational hypertension or preeclampsia, and smoking), (3) obstetrical factors (singleton or multiple, and birth order); (4) access to care (no or third trimester care, and payer), (5) hospital factors that are time-varying (delivery volume, deliveries per full-time equivalent nurse, doctor communication, patient safety, and adverse event composite score) or measured time-invariant characteristics (ownership, profit status, religious affiliation, teaching status, and perinatal level), and (6) residential factors (county urban/rural classification, percent uninsured women of reproductive age, obstetrician-gynecologists per women of reproductive age, number of federally-qualified and community health centers, medically-underserved area [yes/no], and census tract neighborhood deprivation index). We estimated models with and without hospital fixed-effects, which account for unobserved time-invariant hospital characteristics such as within-hospital care processes or unmeasured hospital-specific factors.

RESULTS

There was 1.8 times the rate of severe maternal morbidity per 100 discharges among non-Hispanic Black (3.15) than among White (1.73) individuals, with an explained proportion of 30.4% in models without and 49.8% in models with hospital fixed-effects. In the latter, hospital fixed-effects explained the largest portion of the Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap (15.1%) followed by access to care (14.9%) and sociodemographic factors (14.4%), with residential factors being protective for Black individuals (-7.5%). Smaller proportions were explained by medical (5.6%), obstetrical (4.0%), and time-varying hospital factors (3.2%). Within each category, the largest explanatory portion was payer type (13.3%) for access to care, marital status (10.3%) for sociodemographic, gestational hypertension (3.3%) for medical, birth order (3.6%) for obstetrical, and patient safety indicator (3.1%) for time-varying hospital factors.

CONCLUSION

Models with hospital fixed-effects explain a greater proportion of Georgia's Black-White severe maternal morbidity gap than models without them, thereby supporting the point that differences in care processes or other unmeasured factors within the same hospital translate into racial differences in severe maternal morbidity during delivery through 42 days postpartum. Research is needed to discern and ameliorate sources of within-hospital differences in care. The substantial proportion of the gap attributable to racial differences in access to care and sociodemographic factors points to other needed policy interventions.

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研究 2016-2020 年佐治亚州分娩的严重孕产妇发病率 (SMM) 中黑人与白人之间的种族差异
背景研究发现,分娩医院是造成黑人与白人严重孕产妇发病率差距的重要原因。本研究旨在估算佐治亚州黑人与白人在分娩至产后 42 天内严重孕产妇发病率差距中由医院、居住地和孕产妇因素造成的部分。研究设计通过连接佐治亚州 2016 年至 2020 年的出院、出生和胎儿死亡记录,我们确定了 413,124 例分娩,其中非西班牙裔白人(229,357 例;56%)或黑人(183,767 例;44%)。我们链接了来自美国医院协会和医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心的医院数据,以及来自地区资源档案和美国社区调查的地区数据。我们确定了产妇在分娩期间或产后 42 天的后续住院期间的严重发病指标情况。我们使用特定种族的逻辑模型,然后使用分解技术,估算了黑人与白人严重孕产妇发病率差距中由以下因素造成的部分:(1) 社会人口因素(年龄、教育程度、婚姻状况和出生地),(2) 医疗条件(糖尿病、妊娠糖尿病、慢性高血压、妊娠高血压或子痫前期,以及吸烟),(3) 产科因素(单胎或多胎,以及出生顺序);(4) 获得护理的机会(无护理或第三孕期护理,以及付款人);(5) 随时间变化的医院因素(分娩量、每名相当于全职护士的分娩量、医生沟通、患者安全和不良事件综合评分)或随时间变化的测量特征(所有权、盈利状况、宗教信仰、教学状况、和围产期水平),以及 (6) 居住地因素(县级城市/农村分类、未参保育龄妇女百分比、每名育龄妇女拥有的妇产科医生人数、联邦合格医疗中心和社区医疗中心数量、医疗服务不足地区 [是/否],以及人口普查区邻里贫困指数)。我们估算了有医院固定效应和无医院固定效应的模型,这些模型考虑了未观察到的时间不变的医院特征,如院内护理流程或未测量到的医院特异性因素。结果非西班牙裔黑人每 100 例出院者中严重孕产妇发病率(3.15 例)是白人(1.73 例)的 1.8 倍,无医院固定效应模型的解释比例为 30.4%,有医院固定效应模型的解释比例为 49.8%。在后者中,医院固定效应解释了黑人-白人严重孕产妇发病率差距的最大部分(15.1%),其次是获得护理的机会(14.9%)和社会人口因素(14.4%),居住因素对黑人具有保护作用(-7.5%)。医疗因素(5.6%)、产科因素(4.0%)和医院时变因素(3.2%)的解释比例较小。在每个类别中,最大的解释部分是支付方类型(13.3%)对获得医疗服务的解释,婚姻状况(10.3%)对社会人口学的解释,妊娠高血压(3.3%)对医学的解释,产科(3.6%)对胎次的解释,以及患者安全指标(3.1%)对医院时变因素的解释。结论与不使用医院固定效应的模型相比,使用医院固定效应的模型可以解释佐治亚州黑人与白人严重孕产妇发病率差距的更大比例,从而支持了以下观点,即同一医院内护理流程或其他未测量因素的差异转化为从分娩到产后 42 天内严重孕产妇发病率的种族差异。需要进行研究,以发现并改善医院内护理差异的来源。由于在获得护理和社会人口因素方面存在种族差异,造成了很大比例的差距,这说明还需要采取其他政策干预措施。
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来源期刊
AJOG global reports
AJOG global reports Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health, Urology
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