Acad
Emerg Med 2001 Mar;8(3):259-66
Effect of ethnicity on denial of authorization for emergency department
care by managed care gatekeepers.
Lowe RA, Chhaya S, Nasci K, Gavin LJ, Shaw K, Zwanger ML, Zeccardi JA, Dalsey
WC, Abbuhl SB, Feldman H, Berlin JA.
Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania
Medical Center, and Philadelphia Emergency Medicine Research Consortium,
Philadelphia, PA, USA. rlowe@cceb.med.upenn.edu
OBJECTIVE: After a pilot study suggested that African
American patients enrolled in managed care organizations (MCOs) were more
likely than whites to be denied authorization for emergency department
(ED) care through gatekeeping, the authors sought to determine the association
between ethnicity and denial of authorization in a second, larger study
at another hospital.
METHODS: A retrospective cohort design was used, with
adjustment for triage score, age, gender, day and time of arrival at the
ED, and type of MCO.
RESULTS: African Americans were more likely to be denied
authorization for ED visits by the gatekeepers representing their MCOs
even after adjusting for confounders, with an odds ratio of 1.52 (95%
CI = 1.18 to 1.94).
CONCLUSIONS: African Americans were more likely than
whites to be denied authorization for ED visits. The observational study
design raises the possibility that incomplete control of confounding contributed
to or accounted for the association between ethnicity and gatekeeping
decisions. Nevertheless, the questions that these findings raise about
equity of gatekeeping indicate a need for additional research in this
area.
PMID: 11229948 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]