New retrospective, single-center study explains the disparity that may help explain long-known racial differences in heart failure outcomes.
Heart failure Blacks or Latin Americans are less likely to get admitted to specialized cardiology units, according to new research published in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation: Heart Failure. The study is one of the first to demonstrate that racial inequities in the type of care received, either specialized cardiac care or general care, for patients admitted to the hospital with heart failure may drive subsequent racial inequities in heart failure outcomes.
‘Decision tools, proper education and guidelines for admissions, racial equity training for clinicians could help decrease the gap in access to specialized cardiac care.’
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Researchers reviewed hospital admissions and discharges for 10 years to yield nearly 2,000 patients treated for heart failure at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Read More..
After adjusting for a variety of demographic and clinical factors, the analysis found:
"These outcomes are both unjust and avoidable, and in no way unique to a single institution," said co-lead study author Lauren Eberly, M.D., M.P.H., who was a resident physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital when the study was conducted. "We hope that our findings will encourage other institutions to investigate how racial bias influences care decisions at their center as Brigham and Women's Hospital supported our inquiry. We recommend that care delivery be designed to prioritize the care of our most marginalized patients. Only then can we start to eliminate inequity." Eberly is now a cardiovascular medicine fellow at the University of Pennsylvania.
Racial inequities and higher readmission rates among minority populations have been documented in previous studies, however, this study's findings suggest that admission practices may provide a partial explanation behind these well-known racial disparities in heart failure outcomes.
The researchers emphasize that the observed disparities in outcomes likely stem from structural and systemic differences in care rather than biological differences in disease progression for people of different ancestries.
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The factors behind the difference in admission patterns are likely multifactorial, the researchers said, but reflect inequities in outpatient access to outpatient cardiology care: black and Latinx patients were not under the care of a cardiologist as an outpatient at the time of hospitalization--the strongest predictor of admission to a cardiology unit, according to the study.
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The study was not designed to uncover the reasons behind the higher readmission rates among those treated in the general medicine unit. However, the difference in outcomes may be driven by the greater expertise, improved overall care and specialized support services with focus on cardiac illness that are available in cardiology units.
The researchers noted that premature discharge, inadequate transitions of care from the hospital to home and lower rates of cardiology follow-up for those admitted to general medicine may also worsen patient outcomes.
Decision tools and guidelines for admissions staff and racial equity training for clinicians could help close the gap in access to specialized cardiac care and to improve outcomes.
Increased staff education could also help to standardize heart failure care between cardiology and general medicine units. Additional tools may include strategies to ensure that all patients are followed by a cardiologist after leaving the hospital, the researchers said.
"Research has shown that structural inequities are pervasive throughout health care systems. But identifying inequities is the first step in a process. With significant institutional support and leadership commitment, we have begun the important work of addressing these inequities. We hope other institutions and clinicians will be equally committed to addressing inequities in their own contexts, systems and care settings," said senior study author Eldrin Lewis, M.D., Ph.D., a cardiovascular specialist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. "Equity must be central in everything we do as physicians."
Source-Eurekalert