Health Equity Ratings of U.S. Burn Centers—Does For-Profit Status Matter?

Author:

Rizk Nada1ORCID,Rochlin Danielle1,Sheckter Clifford C12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Stanford University , 770 Welch Road #400, Palo Alto, CA 94304 , USA

2. Department of Surgery, Regional Burn Center, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center , 751 S. Bascom Ave, San Jose, CA 95128 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Achieving health equity is forefront in national discussions on healthcare structuring. Burn injuries transcend racial and socioeconomic boundaries. Burn center funding ranges from safety-net to for-profit without an understanding of how funding mechanisms translate into equity outcomes. We hypothesized that health equity would be highest at safety-net facilities and lowest at for-profit centers. All verified and non-verified American Burn Association burn centers were collated in 2022. Safety-net status, for-profit status, and health equity rating were extracted from national datasets. Equity ratings were compared across national burn centers and significance was determined with comparative statistics and ordinal logistic regression. On an equity grade of A–D (A is the best), 27.6% of centers were rated A, 27.6% rated B, 41.5% rated C, and 3.3% rated D. About 17.1% of all burn centers were designated as for-profit compared to 21.1% of centers that were safety-net. About 73.1% of safety-net centers scored an A rating, and 14.3% of for-profit centers scored an A rating. Safety-net centers were 21.8 times more likely (P < .001) to have the highest equity score compared to nonsafety-net centers. There was an 80% decrease in the odds of having a rating of A for for-profit centers compared to nonprofit centers (P = .04). Safety-net centers had the highest equity ratings while for-profit burn centers scored the lowest. For-profit funding mechanisms may lead to the delivery of less equitable burn care. Burn centers should focus on health equity in the triage and management of their patients.

Funder

Center for Translation Science Advancement

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference32 articles.

1. The impact of race/ethnicity on the outcomes of burn patients: a systematic review of the literature;Jasmine;J Burn Care Res,2021

2. Measurement of health disparities, health inequities, and social determinants of health to support the advancement of health equity;Penman-Aguilar;J Public Health Manag Pract,2016

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