Journal
CHEST
Volume 124, Issue 3, Pages 803-812Publisher
AMER COLL CHEST PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.1378/chest.124.3.803
Keywords
adults; asthma; ethnicity; quality of care; race; socioeconomic status
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Objectives: To investigate racial/ethnic differences in acute asthma among adults presenting to the emergency department (ED), and to determine whether observed differences are attributable to socioeconomic status (SES). Design: Prospective cohort studies performed during 1996 to 1998 by the Multicenter Airway Research Collaboration. Using a standardized protocol, researchers provided 24-h coverage for a median duration of 2 weeks per year. Adults with acute asthma were interviewed in the ED and by telephone 2 weeks after hospital discharge. Participants: Sixty-four North American EDs. Results: A total of 1,847 patients were enrolled into the study. Black and Hispanic asthma patients had a history of more hospitalizations than did whites (ever-hospitalized patients: black, 66%; Hispanic, 63%; white, 54%; p < 0.001; patients hospitalized in the past year: black, 31%; Hispanic, 33%; white, 25%; p < 0.05) and more frequent ED use (median use in past year: black, three visits; Hispanic, three visits; white, one visit; p < 0.001). The mean initial peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) was lower in blacks and Hispanics (black, 47%; Hispanic, 47%; white, 52%; p < 0.001). For most factors, ED management did not differ based on race/ethnicity. After accounting for several confounding variables, blacks and Hispanics were twice as likely to be admitted to the hospital. Blacks and Hispanics also were more likely to report continued severe symptoms 2 weeks after hospital discharge (blacks, 24%; Hispanic, 31%; white, 19%; p < 0.01). After adjusting for sociodemographic factors, the race/ethnicity differences in initial PEFR and posthospital discharge symptoms were markedly reduced. Conclusion: Despite significant racial/ethnic differences in chronic asthma severity, initial PEFR at ED presentation, and posthospital discharge outcome, ED management during the index visit was fairly similar for all racial groups. SES appears to account for most of the observed acute asthma differences, although hospital admission rates were higher among black and Hispanic patients after adjustment for confounding factors. Despite asthma treatment advances, race/ethnicity-based deficiencies persist. Health-care providers and policymakers might specifically target the ED as a place to initiate interventions designed to reduce race-based disparities in health.
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