Concordance between electronic health record‐recorded race/ethnicity and parental report in hospitalized children

Author:

Hoang Kim1ORCID,Gold Jessica1,Powell Carmin1,Lee Henry C.2,Floyd Baraka3,Schroeder Alan1,Chadwick Whitney14

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatrics Hospital Medicine Stanford University School of Medicine Palo Alto California USA

2. Division of Neonatology University of California San Diego La Jolla California USA

3. Division of General Pediatrics Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

4. Department of Information Services Stanford Children's Health Palo Alto California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundElectronic health records (EHRs) have become an important repository for patient race and ethnicity. Misclassification could negatively affect efforts to monitor and reduce health disparities and structural discrimination.ObjectiveWe assessed the concordance of parental reports of race/ethnicity for their hospitalized children with EHR‐documented demographics. We also aimed to describe parents' preferences on how race/ethnicity should be captured in the hospital's EHR.Designs, Settings, and ParticipantsFrom December 2021 to May 2022, we conducted a single‐center cross‐sectional survey of parents of hospitalized children asking to describe their child's race/ethnicity and compared these responses to the race/ethnicity documented in the EHR.Main Outcome and MeasuresConcordance was analyzed with a kappa statistic (κ). Additionally, we queried respondents about their awareness of and preferences for race/ethnicity documentation.ResultsOf the 275 participants surveyed (79% response rate), there was 69% agreement (κ = 0.56) for race and 80% agreement (κ = 0.63) for ethnicity between parent report and EHR documentation. Sixty‐eight parents (21%) felt that the designated categories poorly represent their child's race/ethnicity. Twenty‐two (8%) were uncomfortable with their child's race/ethnicity being displayed on the hospital's EHR. Eighty‐nine (32%) preferred a more comprehensive list of race/ethnicity categories.ConclusionsNonconcordance between EHR‐recorded race/ethnicity and parental report exists in the EHR for our hospitalized patients, which has implications for describing patient populations and for understanding racial and ethnic disparities. Current EHR categories may be limited in their ability to capture the complexity of these constructs. Future efforts should focus on ensuring that demographic information in the EHR is accurately collected and appropriately reflects families' preferences.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Assessment and Diagnosis,Care Planning,Health Policy,Fundamentals and skills,General Medicine,Leadership and Management

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