Black Inpatients at Higher Risk for Poor Safety Outcomes

Black patients who undergo treatment at hospitals in the United States face significantly higher risk regarding several measures of patient safety compared with their White counterparts, a new report finds. One expert says these findings should be a call to action for hospitals and physicians.

The Urban Institute, which is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, evaluated differences in Black and White patient safety measures among adults who received inpatient care in 26 states.

Care quality was measured by the rate of preventable adverse hospital patient safety events per 1000 at-risk discharges using data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Researchers compared experience by race regarding 11 patient safety indicators. Four were related to general patient safety, and seven were linked to risk for adverse events with surgical procedures.

Surgical Risk Differences Significant

The gaps were widest with regard to surgical care. Black patients were 7.9 percentage points more likely to be in a hospital considered to be of low quality with regard to all surgical safety measures. They were 4.9 percentage points more likely to be admitted to a hospital considered to be of low quality across all general safety indicators.

Author Anuj Gangopadhyaya, PhD, senior research associate at the Urban Institute, told Medscape Medical News: “If you’re a Black patient getting surgery — relative to a White patient — in my study, you were 25% less likely to be in a hospital that prevented hemorrhage during surgery; you were 26% less likely to be in a hospital that prevented postoperative respiratory failure; and you were more than 30% less likely to be in a hospital that is effective in preventing postoperative sepsis.”

According to the report, Black patients were also 31.9% less likely than White patients to be admitted to hospitals considered to be of high quality regarding the prevention of pressure ulcers and 22.8% less likely to be in a hospital good at preventing iatrogenic pneumothorax.

Gangopadhyaya said this may be the first study to make such comparisons after the inception of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). These data were collected in 2017, 3 years after the core elements of the ACA kicked in.

He said that although the ACA has done much to narrow the racial gap in terms of insurance coverage, it has not been effective in reducing the heightened safety risk to Black patients in the hospital.

“Shocking Though Not Surprising”

Uché Blackstock, MD, founder and CEO of Advancing Health Equity, in New York City, called the findings “shocking, though not surprising.”

These data were collected before the COVID-19 pandemic, which has exposed profound racial inequities, she noted.

She cited the example of Susan Moore, MD, a Black physician in Carmel, Indiana, who died from COVID-19 at age 52 in December after experiencing what she said was systemic racism in her care.

“We saw in the death of Dr Susan Moore that even having a formal education and being a physician is not protective for Black patients. These findings only reaffirm what we already know ― that Black patients receive worse and lower-quality care than White patients,” Blackstock told Medscape Medical News.

“These findings are not a result of Black patients’ individual choices, as is often suggested, but rather the results of a healthcare system that has devalued the lives of Black patients and inherently provides poorer quality of care to them,” she said.

Blackstock said this report represents a call to action.

Healthcare institutions must, she said, “look inward at the intentional and critical antiracism work that must be done on provider, organizational, and systems levels by allocating the necessary resources, continuing to track disaggregated health metrics, and committing to structural change within healthcare systems.”

Resources Instead of Penalties?

Gangopadhyaya says that in the second phase of the research, they will compare safety outcomes between Black and White patients in the same hospital. Those results will shed more light on what’s driving the differences in risk regarding safety measures.

He acknowledged that, particularly in an emergency, there is little choice as to which hospital a patient enters. Patients typically go to a hospital in their neighborhood. And it’s well established that ZIP codes can determine healthcare outcomes.

But he suspects the differences cannot be explained simply by socioeconomic factors.

He pointed out that previous research has found disparities among Black and White patients in the same neighborhoods.

In one part of this study, researchers narrowed the comparison to Black and White adults with Medicare coverage, in which provider networks and reimbursement structures were similar, to assess whether insurance was playing a significant role.

“Even among that group, you still see the persistent differences in the safety risks driven by the hospitals patients are admitted to,” Gangopadhyaya said.

He suggests two policy approaches to address the gaps. One is to find ways for high-quality hospitals to reach more people of color. The other is to find out what’s keeping the low-quality hospitals from implementing the practices that are effective in high-quality hospitals.

Currently, the ACA has penalties in place for hospitals that score low with regard to specific safety risks, he said. He noted that that approach doesn’t appear to be working.

“Perhaps instead of penalizing hospitals, we might want to consider providing resources to hospitals that help them better adopt the successful protocols in their high-quality counterparts,” he said.

The Urban Institute is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Gangopadhyaya and Blackstock have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Marcia Frellick is a freelance journalist based in Chicago. She has previously written for the Chicago Tribune and Nurse.com and was an editor at the Chicago Sun-Times, the Cincinnati Enquirer, and the St. Cloud (Minnesota) Times. Follow her on Twitter at @mfrellick.

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