1. Disparities in Acute Stroke Care: Role of Race and Insurance Status
- Author
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Helena Lau, Michael Winter, Jose R. Romero, Viken L. Babikian, Thanh N. Nguyen, and Carlos S. Kase
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Race (biology) ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,Insurance status ,medicine ,General Materials Science ,business ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Background: Minorities constitute groups with higher risk of stroke and stroke severity. Disparities in stroke care may result from greater prevalence of risk factors, barriers to medical care, and lower utilization of preventive therapies. Insurance status may be one limiting factor in access to care and preventive measures. Purpose: We hypothesize that vascular risk factors differ between racial groups and that insurance status may affect stroke treatment, secondary prevention measures, stroke severity, and outcomes. Methods: We included 1061 consecutive patients with ischemic stroke (2005-2008) in our local Get-With-The-Guidelines (GWTG) database. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate the relation of race and insurance status to risk factors, intravenous thrombolytic therapy (IV-tPA) use, stroke severity (National Institute of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS]), hospital complications, and ambulatory status at discharge. Results: Whites were older than Non-Whites (mean age 65 vs 62 years, p
- Published
- 2022
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