Rates of Surgical Consultations After Emergency Department Admission in Black and White Medicare Patients

Author:

Roberts Sanford E.1,Rosen Claire B.1,Keele Luke J.1,Wirtalla Christopher J.1,Syvyk Solomiya1,Kaufman Elinore J.1,Reilly Patrick M.1,Neuman Mark D.2,McHugh Matthew D.3,Kelz Rachel R.4

Affiliation:

1. Center for Surgery and Health Economics, Department of Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

2. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

3. Center for Health Outcomes & Policy Research, School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

4. Leonard David Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

Abstract

ImportanceA surgical consultation is a critical first step in the care of patients with emergency general surgery conditions. It is unknown if Black Medicare patients and White Medicare patients receive surgical consultations at similar rates when they are admitted from the emergency department.ObjectiveTo determine whether Black Medicare patients have similar rates of surgical consultations when compared with White Medicare patients after being admitted from the emergency department with an emergency general surgery condition.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis was a retrospective cohort study that took place at US hospitals with an emergency department and used a computational generalization of inverse propensity score weight to create patient populations with similar covariate distributions. Participants were Medicare patients age 65.5 years or older admitted from the emergency department for an emergency general surgery condition between July 1, 2015, and June 30, 2018. The analysis was performed during February 2022. Patients were classified into 1 of 5 emergency general surgery condition categories based on principal diagnosis codes: colorectal, general abdominal, hepatopancreatobiliary, intestinal obstruction, and upper gastrointestinal.ExposuresBlack vs White race.Main Outcomes and MeasuresReceipt of a surgical consultation after admission from the emergency department with an emergency general surgery condition.ResultsA total of 1 686 940 patients were included in the study. Of those included, 214 788 patients were Black (12.7%) and 1 472 152 patients were White (87.3%). After standardizing for medical and diagnostic imaging covariates, Black patients had 14% lower odds of receiving a surgical consultation (odds ratio [OR], 0.86; 95% CI, 0.85-0.87) with a risk difference of −3.17 (95% CI, −3.41 to −2.92). After standardizing for socioeconomic covariates, Black patients remained at an 11% lower odds of receiving a surgical consultation compared with similar White patients (OR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.88-0.90) with a risk difference of −2.49 (95% CI, −2.75 to −2.23). Additionally, when restricting the analysis to Black patients and White patients who were treated in the same hospitals, Black patients had 8% lower odds of receiving a surgical consultation when compared with White patients (OR, 0.92; 95% CI, 0.90-0.93) with a risk difference of −1.82 (95% CI, −2.18 to −1.46).Conclusions and RelevanceIn this study, Black Medicare patients had lower odds of receiving a surgical consultation after being admitted from the emergency department with an emergency general surgery condition when compared with similar White Medicare patients. These disparities in consultation rates cannot be fully attributed to medical comorbidities, insurance status, socioeconomic factors, or individual hospital-level effects.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Subject

Surgery

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