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Hospital practice (1995) · Apr 2013
Comparative StudySex disparities in pre-hospital and hospital treatment of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
- Michael E Rezaee, Jeremiah R Brown, Sheila M Conley, Tamara A Anderson, Rosemary M Caron, and Nathaniel W Niles.
- The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Lebanon, NH, USA. michael.ericson.rezaee@gmail.com
- Hosp Pract (1995). 2013 Apr 1;41(2):25-33.
ObjectiveTo determine whether sex disparities exist in pre-hospital and hospital time to treatment in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).BackgroundEvidence suggests that women experience poorer quality of care for STEMI.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted on 177 consecutive patients with STEMI who received primary percutaneous coronary intervention at a rural, tertiary medical center between January 2006 and October 2009. A subgroup analysis was conducted to evaluate time to treatment during a period of no-focused process improvement compared with a time period of focused, non–sex-specific process improvement; the post period included implementation of the STEMI process upgrade (STEP-UP) quality-improvement (QI) program.ResultsMedian first-emergency-medical-services-contact-to-balloon (E2B) angioplasty time was significantly longer for women compared with men. A Cox proportional hazards model revealed that men had a significantly shorter E2B time than women. After adjustment for differences between sex groups at presentation, the effect of sex on E2B was no longer statistically significant. A similar effect was observed in door-to-balloon (D2B) angioplasty time. The subgroup analysis revealed that from baseline, both men and women experienced improvement in E2B time after implementation of the STEP-UP QI program. Men and women also experienced improvement in D2B time after implementation of the STEP-UP QI program.ConclusionsWomen with STEMI experienced significantly longer E2B and D2B times compared with men with STEMI, although these differences did not persist after adjustment for differences between sex groups at presentation. In addition to standard STEMI-care QI practices, sex-specific processes and interventions at the systems level may be needed to improve time to treatment for women with STEMI.
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