Med
Care 1997 Dec;35(12):1173-89
Medicare treatment differences for blacks and whites.
Lee AJ, Gehlbach S, Hosmer, Reti M, Baker CS.
Center for Health Economics Research, Waltham, MA 02154 USA.
OBJECTIVES: This study investigated racial differences
in procedure use among elderly Medicare beneficiaries. It is hypothesized
that providers do not discriminate inappropriately in treating black and
white patients and that the apparent differences in black-white treatment
could be attributed to other differences between the two populations.
METHODS: Rates of use for selected procedures were examined
among two patient groups: (1) the universe of Medicare beneficiaries in
10 states and the District of Columbia and (2) a subset of this sample
created by matching beneficiaries on the basis of zip code of residence
to neutralize the effects of black-white differences in provider access
and regional practice patterns. Because all Medicare beneficiaries have
a common core of standard benefits, the importance of financial access
differences in accounting for black/white utilization differences is diminished.
RESULTS: Three major findings were indicated from this
study: (1) area-controlled comparisons find even larger black-white disparities
than those shown from uncontrolled comparisons, (2) the disparities are
larger in southern states, and (3) the disparities vary substantially
with procedure cost.
CONCLUSIONS: Although no clinical data were analyzed,
providers appeared to be giving less intensive treatment to otherwise
similar black Medicare beneficiaries.
PMID: 9413306 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]