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Identifying Population-Level and Within-Hospital Disparities in Surgical Care.

Authors :
de Jager, Elzerie
Osman, Samia Y.
Sheu, Christina
Moberg, Esther
Ye, Jamie
Yaoming Liu
Cohen, Mark E.
Burstin, Helen R.
Hoyt, David B.
Schoenfeld, Andrew J.
Haider, Adil H.
Ko, Clifford Y.
Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda A.
Weissman, Joel S.
Britt, L. D.
Source :
Journal of the American College of Surgeons (2563-9021). Sep2024, Vol. 239 Issue 3, p223-233. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The lack of consensus on equity measurement and its incorporation into quality-assessment programs at the hospital and system levels may be a barrier to addressing disparities in surgical care. This study aimed to identify population-level and within-hospital differences in the quality of surgical care provision. STUDY DESIGN: The analysis included 657 NSQIP participating hospitals with more than 4 million patients (2014 to 2018). Multilevel random slope, random intercept modeling was used to examine for population-level and in-hospital disparities. Disparities in surgical care by Area Deprivation Index (ADI), race, and ethnicity were analyzed for 5 measures: all-case inpatient mortality, all-case urgent readmission, all-case postoperative surgical site infection, colectomy mortality, and spine surgery complications. RESULTS: Population-level disparities were identified across all measures by ADI, 2 measures for Black race (all-case readmissions and spine surgery complications), and none for Hispanic ethnicity. Disparities remained significant in the adjusted models. Before risk adjustment, in all measures examined, within-hospital disparities were detected in: 25.8% to 99.8% of hospitals for ADI, 0% to 6.1% of hospitals for Black race, and 0% to 0.8% of hospitals for Hispanic ethnicity. After risk adjustment, in all measures examined, less than 1.1% of hospitals demonstrated disparities by ADI, race, or ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS: After risk adjustment, very few hospitals demonstrated significant disparities in care. Disparities were more frequently detected by ADI than by race and ethnicity. The lack of substantial inhospital disparities may be due to the use of postoperative metrics, small sample sizes, the risk adjustment methodology, and healthcare segregation. Further work should examine surgical access and healthcare segregation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25639021
Volume :
239
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Surgeons (2563-9021)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179270206
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/XCS.0000000000001113