A multi-state analysis on the effect of deprivation and race on PICU admission and mortality in children receiving Medicaid in United States (2007-2014).

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS BMC Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-09-05 DOI:10.1186/s12887-024-05031-3
Hannah K Mitchell, Joshua Radack, Molly Passarella, Scott A Lorch, Nadir Yehya
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Abstract

Introduction: In the United States (US), racial and socioeconomic disparities have been implicated in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions and outcomes, with higher rates of critical illness in more deprived areas. The degree to which this persists despite insurance coverage is unknown. We investigated whether disparities exist in PICU admission and mortality according to socioeconomic position and race in children receiving Medicaid.

Methods: Using Medicaid data from 2007-2014 from 23 US states, we tested the association between area level deprivation and race on PICU admission (among hospitalized children) and mortality (among PICU admissions). Race was categorized as Black, White, other and missing. Patient-level ZIP Code was used to generate a multicomponent variable describing area-level social vulnerability index (SVI). Race and SVI were simultaneously tested for associations with PICU admission and mortality.

Results: The cohort contained 8,914,347 children (23·0% Black). There was no clear trend in odds of PICU admission by SVI; however, children residing in the most vulnerable quartile had increased PICU mortality (aOR 1·12 (95%CI 1·04-1·20; p = 0·0021). Black children had higher odds of PICU admission (aOR 1·04; 95% CI 1·03-1·05; p < 0·0001) and higher mortality (aOR 1·09; 95% CI 1·02-1·16; p = 0·0109) relative to White children. Substantial state-level variation was apparent, with the odds of mortality in Black children varying from 0·62 to 1·8.

Conclusion: In a Medicaid cohort from 2007-2014, children with greater socioeconomic vulnerability had increased odds of PICU mortality. Black children were at increased risk of PICU admission and mortality, with substantial state-level variation. Our work highlights the persistence of sociodemographic disparities in outcomes even among insured children.

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美国多州分析贫困和种族对接受医疗补助的儿童入住 PICU 和死亡率的影响(2007-2014 年)。
导言:在美国,儿科重症监护室(PICU)的入院率和治疗效果存在种族和社会经济差异,贫困地区的危重病发病率更高。尽管有保险覆盖,但这种情况在多大程度上仍然存在,目前尚不清楚。我们调查了在接受医疗补助的儿童中,是否存在因社会经济地位和种族而导致的 PICU 入院率和死亡率差异:利用美国 23 个州 2007-2014 年的医疗补助数据,我们检验了地区贫困程度和种族与 PICU 入院人数(住院儿童)和死亡率(PICU 入院人数)之间的关联。种族分为黑人、白人、其他和缺失。患者级别的邮政编码用于生成描述地区级别社会脆弱性指数(SVI)的多成分变量。同时检测了种族和 SVI 与 PICU 入院和死亡率的关联:队列中有 8,914,347 名儿童(23%-0% 为黑人)。根据 SVI,儿童入住 PICU 的几率没有明显的趋势;但是,居住在最脆弱四分位数的儿童的 PICU 死亡率增加(aOR 1-12 (95%CI 1-04-1-20; p = 0-0021)。黑人儿童入住 PICU 的几率更高(aOR 1-04;95%CI 1-03-1-05;p 结论:黑人儿童入住 PICU 的几率更高(aOR 1-04;95%CI 1-03-1-05):在 2007-2014 年的医疗补助队列中,社会经济地位较低的儿童入住 PICU 的几率更高。黑人儿童入住 PICU 的风险和死亡率均有所上升,各州之间的差异很大。我们的工作凸显了即使在参保儿童中,社会人口统计学结果差异的持续存在。
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来源期刊
BMC Pediatrics
BMC Pediatrics PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.20%
发文量
683
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Pediatrics is an open access journal publishing peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of health care in neonates, children and adolescents, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology.
期刊最新文献
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