Health
Care Financ Rev 1994 Summer;15(4):77-90
Differences by race in the rates of procedures performed in hospitals
for Medicare beneficiaries.
McBean AM, Gornick M.
Health Care Financing Administration.
This study analyzes administrative data from the Medicare program to
compare differences by race in the use of 17 major procedures performed
in the hospital. In both 1986 and 1992, black beneficiaries were less
likely than white beneficiaries to have received these procedures while
hospitalized. The largest differences were seen for "referral-sensitive
surgeries" such as percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty,
coronary artery bypass graft surgery, total knee replacement, and total
hip replacement. These differences by race suggest that there are barriers
to these services. In contrast, black beneficiaries were found to have
substantially higher rates than white beneficiaries in the use of four
procedures performed in the hospital: amputation of part of the lower
limb, surgical debridement, arteriovenostomy, and bilateral orchiectomy.
The types of procedures for which black beneficiaries have higher rates
raise questions about whether there is a need for more comprehensive and
continuous ambulatory care for the underlying health conditions associated
with these procedures.
Publication Types: Review ; Review, Tutorial
PMID: 10172157 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]