J
Health Polit Policy Law 1994 Fall;19(3):583-95
Access to long-term care: race as a barrier.
Falcone D, Broyles R.
University of Oklahoma.
Race continues to impede access to health services, for acute as well
as long-term care. Whites, for example, use disproportionately more days
of nursing home care than nonwhites, not simply because they are more
likely to be private payers and, therefore, are preferred over nonwhites:
the difference in utilization persists even among those whose nursing
home stays are covered by Medicare. Using data from a study of patients
awaiting alternative placement in North Carolina acute care general hospitals
in 1991, this article examines racial differences in discharge delay,
that is, in the time between when a patient is medically ready for discharge
to another form of care and when he or she actually is discharged. Logistic
regression and ordinary least squares are used heuristically to identify
patient characteristics associated with delay, and two-way analyses of
variance are used to document the independent effect of race. The results
indicate that race has substantial independent explanatory power. This
finding is reinforced by the analysis of variance with controls for the
patient's payment source for long-term care, chronic condition or special
care requirements, demographic attributes, family cooperativeness, whether
the patient had a behavior problem that impeded the discharge planning
process, and whether there was a financial problem in arranging for the
patient's discharge. The inescapable conclusion is that nursing homes
discriminate on the basis of race in admitting patients. This practice
is patently objectionable; it also is costly to hospitals, thus to society,
since hospitals bear the direct costs of delayed discharges and hospitals
do not keep costs to themselves. While research is needed to determine
whether the North Carolina findings are replicable in other states, past
research suggests that the problem is not confined to this state.
PMID: 7844323 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]