Arch
Ophthalmol 2000 Feb;118(2):253-6
Surgical undertreatment of glaucoma in black beneficiaries of medicare.
Devgan U, Yu F, Kim E, Coleman AL.
Jules Stein Eye Institute and the Department of Ophthalmology, UCLA School
of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif 90095-7004, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To identify whether there was surgical undertreatment
of glaucoma in black beneficiaries of Medicare from 1991 to 1994.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort analysis
on all argon laser trabeculoplasty or trabeculectomy surgery claims to
the Health Care Financing Administration between 1991 and 1994. There
were 191 287 Medicare patients who were black or white, at least 65 years
of age, and resided in the United States at the time of their glaucoma
surgery. Age- and sex-adjusted rates were obtained and compared with surgery
rates expected based on disease prevalence.
RESULTS: The age-sex-adjusted rate ratio of glaucoma
surgical procedures for blacks to whites was 2.14. Assuming that treatments
should be done in proportion to age-race prevalence, blacks undergo glaucoma
surgery at approximately 47% below the expected rate.
CONCLUSIONS: Blacks underwent argon laser trabeculoplasties
and trabeculectomies at half the rate of whites from 1991 to 1994. Although
in 1993 and 1994 there was a slight trend toward higher surgery rates
in blacks, the magnitude of this improvement was small compared with estimated
differences in the surgery rates between blacks and whites.
PMID: 10676791 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]