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J Health Behav 2001 Jan-Feb;25(1):60-71
Equity in the diagnosis of chest pain: race and gender.
Bell PD, Hudson S.
Department of Health Information Management, School of Allied Health
Sciences, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858, USA. bellp@mail.ecu.edu
OBJECTIVE: To explore gender and racial equity in emergency
room treatment of chest pain.
METHODS: Three hundred seventy-nine patient records were
analyzed, taking into account effects of age, clinic, comorbid status,
and insurance status.
RESULTS: Analysis of covariance and logistic regression
revealed statistically significant differences between races but not between
genders for time to first EKG and percent of patients receiving cardiac
catheterization and echocardiography. Blacks waited longer than whites
for an EKG and were less likely to receive cardiac catheterizations but
more likely to receive echocardiography.
CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates a lack of equity
by race in treatment of chest pain emergencies.
Publication Types: Multicenter Study
PMID: 11289730 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]