Arch
Intern Med 1996 Jun 10;156(11):1217-24
Gender and ethnic differences in hospital-based procedure utilization
in California.
Giacomini MK.
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University,
Hamilton, Ontario.
OBJECTIVE: To examine several hospital-based procedures
for systematic utilization differences between the genders and among ethnic
groups (Asian, black, Latino, and white).
METHODS: California hospital discharges in 1989 and 1990
were sampled by principal diagnosis. Odds ratios for treatment by demographic
class were estimated for heart transplantation, kidney transplantation,
extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy, hip replacement, carotid endarterectomy,
coronary artery bypass grafting, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty,
pacemaker implant, and automatic cardioverter-defibrillator implant. Logistic
regression controlled for insurance status, age, diagnosis, and comorbidity
count.
RESULTS: The following results were statistically significant
(P < .05). Males' odds of receiving most procedures exceeded those
of females by 115% (odds ratio, 2.15) for coronary artery bypass grafting,
86% for heart transplantation, 38% for defibrillator implants, 34% for
angioplasty, 28% for pacemaker implants, and 24% for hip replacement.
Whites' odds of receiving several procedures exceeded those of blacks
by 204% for kidney transplantation, 186% for defibrillator implant, 144%
for coronary artery bypass grafting, 127% for endarterectomy, and 100%
for angioplasty. Whites' odds of receiving some procedures also exceeded
those of Latinos by 72% for angioplasty, 58% for kidney transplantation,
and 49% for coronary artery bypass grafting. Whites' odds of receiving
endarterectomy or angioplasty exceeded those of Asians by 108% and 30%,
respectively. Asians had 113% higher odds than whites of receiving hip
replacement.
CONCLUSIONS: The array of utilization differences across 4 demographic
comparisons and 9 hospital procedures suggests systematic trends in high-technology
allocation. Generally, women received procedures less often than men and
minorities less than whites.
PMID: 8639016 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]