Med Care 1999 Dec;37(12):1260-9
Quality of care by race and gender for congestive heart failure and
pneumonia.
Ayanian JZ, Weissman JS, Chasan-Taber S, Epstein AM.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. ayanian@hcp.med.harvard.edu
BACKGROUND: Variations in the rates of major procedures
by race and gender are well described, but few studies have assessed the
quality of care by race and gender for basic hospital services.
OBJECTIVE: To assess quality of care by race and gender.
RESEARCH DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records.
SUBJECTS: Stratified random sample of 2,175 Medicare
beneficiaries hospitalized for congestive heart failure or pneumonia in
Illinois, New York, and Pennsylvania during 1991 and 1992.
MEASURES: Explicit process criteria and implicit review
by physicians.
RESULTS: In adjusted analyses, black patients with congestive
heart failure or pneumonia received lower quality of care overall than
other patients with these conditions by both explicit process criteria
and implicit review (P < 0.05). On explicit measures, overall quality
of care did not differ by gender for either condition, but significant
differences were noted on explicit subscales. Women received worse cognitive
care than men from physicians for both conditions, better cognitive care
from nurses for pneumonia, and better therapeutic care for congestive
heart failure (P < 0.05). Women received worse quality of care than
men by implicit review (P = 0.03) for congestive heart failure but not
pneumonia.
CONCLUSIONS: Consistent racial differences in quality
of care persist in basic hospital services for two common medical conditions.
Physicians, nurses, and policy makers should strive to eliminate these
differences. Gender differences in quality of care are less pronounced
and may vary by condition and type of provider or service.
PMID: 10599607 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]