A Retrospective Analysis of the Impact of Health Disparities on Treatment for Single Suture Craniosynostosis Before and During the Pandemic

Author:

Hoffman Caitlin1,Valenti Alyssa2ORCID,Buontempo Michelle1,Imahiyerobo Thomas3

Affiliation:

1. NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital Ringgold Standard Institution, New York, NY, USA

2. New York Presbyterian, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center Ringgold Standard Institution, New York, NY, USA

3. New York Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical School - Division of Plastic Surgery, NY, New York, USA

Abstract

Candidates for endoscopic treatment for craniosynostosis must be less than 6 months old. Given the narrow window of eligibility, there is potential for barriers to access to impact the type of surgery a patient receives. We hypothesized that COVID may worsen these potential disparities. Charts were reviewed for children with single suture craniosynostosis from January 2014 to March 2020 (pre-COVID cohort) and March 2020 to September 2021 (COVID cohort) from 2 academic centers. 110 children were in the pre-COVID group; 56 were treated open and 54 endoscopically. Of the 44 patients in the COVID cohort, 20 were treated endoscopically and 24 were treated open. There was no significant difference in age of presentation or age of surgery across cohorts when considering type of surgery performed. Rate of endoscopy in the pre-COVID versus COVID cohorts was not significantly different. In both the pre-COVID and COVID cohorts there were significant differences between age of presentation, age of surgery, and type of surgery received based on race—black and Hispanic patients presented later, had surgery later, and underwent open surgery more frequently than their white/Asian counterparts ( P = .0095, P = .0067). The pandemic did not alter age of presentation/age of surgery or rates of patients receiving endoscopic surgery in patients with single suture craniosynostosis. There was no relationship between insurance status and type of surgery received during the pandemic, however Hispanic and black patients presented later and underwent surgery at an older age compared to white/Asian patients as they did pre-pandemic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Oral Surgery

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