• Pediatr Crit Care Me · Aug 2022

    Geospatial Analysis of Social Determinants of Health Identifies Neighborhood Hot Spots Associated With Pediatric Intensive Care Use for Acute Respiratory Failure Requiring Mechanical Ventilation.

    • Nadine Najjar, Cydney Opolka, Anne M Fitzpatrick, and Jocelyn R Grunwell.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2022 Aug 1; 23 (8): 606617606-617.

    ObjectivesPoverty, racial bias, and disparities are linked to adverse health outcomes for children in the United States. The social vulnerability and child opportunity indices are composite measures of the social, economic, education, health, and environmental qualities that affect human health for every U.S. census tract. Composite measures of social vulnerability and child opportunity were compared for neighborhood hot spots, where PICU admissions for acute respiratory failure requiring invasive mechanical ventilation were at the 90th percentile or greater per 1,000 children, versus non-hot spots.DesignPopulation-based ecological study.SettingTwo urban free-standing children's hospital PICUs consisting of a 36-bed quaternary academic and a 56-bed tertiary community center, in Atlanta, GA.PatientsMechanically ventilated children who were 17 years of age or younger with a geocodable Georgia residential address admitted to a PICU for at least 1 day.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsResidential addresses were geocoded and spatially joined to census tracts. Composite measures of social vulnerability and childhood opportunity, PICU readmission rates, and hospital length of stay were compared between neighborhood hot spots versus non-hot spots. There were 340 of 3,514 children (9.7%) who lived within a hot spot. Hot spots were associated with a higher (worse) composite social vulnerability index ranking, reflecting differences in socioeconomic status, household composition and disability, and housing type and transportation. Hot spots also had a lower (worse) composite childhood opportunity index percentile ranking, reflecting differences in the education, health and environment, and social and economic domains. Higher social vulnerability and lower childhood opportunity were not associated with readmission rates but were associated with longer total median duration of hospital days per 1,000 children in a census tract.ConclusionsSocial determinants of health identified by geospatial analyses are associated with acute respiratory failure requiring invasive mechanical ventilation in critically ill children. Interventions addressing the neighborhood social vulnerability and child opportunity are needed to decrease disparities in intensive care admissions for acute respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation.Copyright © 2022 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.

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