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- K L Kahn, M L Pearson, E R Harrison, K A Desmond, W H Rogers, L V Rubenstein, R H Brook, and E B Keeler.
- Health Program of RAND, Santa Monica, CA.
- JAMA. 1994 Apr 20; 271 (15): 116911741169-74.
ObjectiveTo analyze whether elderly patients who are black or from poor neighborhoods receive worse hospital care than other patients, taking account of hospital effects and using validated measures of quality of care.DesignWe compare quality of care provided to insured, hospitalized Medicare patients who are black or live in poor neighborhoods as compared with others, using simple and multivariable comparisons of clinically detailed measures of sickness at admission, quality, and outcomes.SettingTwo hundred ninety-seven acute care hospitals in 30 areas within five states.Patients Or Other ParticipantsThe sample includes a nationally representative sample of 9932 patients 65 years of age or older who lived at home prior to hospitalization for congestive heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, pneumonia, or stroke.InterventionsThis was an observational study.Main Outcome MeasuresProcesses of care, length of stay, instability at discharge, discharge destination, and mortality.ResultsWithin rural, urban nonteaching, and urban teaching hospitals, patients who are black or from poor neighborhoods have worse processes of care and greater instability at discharge than other patients (P < .05). However, this worse quality is offset by patients who are black or from poor neighborhoods being 1.8 times more likely to receive care in urban teaching hospitals that have been shown to provide better quality of care (P < .001). Because these patients receive more of their care in better-quality hospitals, there are no overall differences in quality by race and poverty status. Death rates did not vary by race or poverty status.ConclusionsQuality of hospital care for insured Medicare patients in influenced both by the patient's race and financial characteristics and by the hospital type in which the patient receives care.
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