Is Thirty‐Day Hospital Mortality Really Lower for Black Veterans Compared with White Veterans?
- 24 January 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 42 (4) , 1613-1631
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00688.x
Abstract
To examine the source of observed lower risk-adjusted mortality for blacks than whites within the Veterans Affairs (VA) system by accounting for hospital site where treated, potential under-reporting of black deaths, discretion on hospital admission, quality improvement efforts, and interactions by age group. Data are from the VA Patient Treatment File on 406,550 hospitalizations of veterans admitted with a principal diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction, stroke, hip fracture, gastrointestinal bleeding, congestive heart failure, or pneumonia between 1996 and 2002. Information on deaths was obtained from the VA Beneficiary Identification Record Locator System and the National Death Index. This was a retrospective observational study of hospitalizations throughout the VA system nationally. The primary outcome studied was all-location mortality within 30 days of hospital admission. The key study variable was whether a patient was black or white. For each of the six study conditions, unadjusted 30-day mortality rates were significantly lower for blacks than for whites (p<.01). These results did not vary after adjusting for hospital site where treated, more complete ascertainment of deaths, and in comparing results for conditions for which hospital admission is discretionary versus non-discretionary. There were also no significant changes in the degree of difference by race in mortality by race following quality improvement efforts within VA. Risk-adjusted mortality was consistently lower for blacks than for whites only within the population of veterans over age 65. Black veterans have significantly lower 30-day mortality than white veterans for six common, high severity conditions, but this is generally limited to veterans over age 65. This differential by age suggests that it is unlikely that lower 30-day mortality rates among blacks within VA are driven by treatment differences by race.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diabetes status and racial differences in post–myocardial infarction mortalityAmerican Heart Journal, 2005
- Racial/ethnic differences in surgical outcomes in veterans following knee or hip arthroplastyArthritis & Rheumatism, 2005
- Sex and Racial Differences in the Management of Acute Myocardial Infarction, 1994 through 2002New England Journal of Medicine, 2005
- No racial differences in mortality found among veterans health administration out-patientsJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2004
- Veterans Administration Acute Stroke (VASt) StudyStroke, 2003
- Impact of Patient Socioeconomic Status on Physician ProfilesMedical Care, 2001
- Potentially avoidable hospitalizations: inequalities in rates between US socioeconomic groups.American Journal of Public Health, 1997
- Racial variation in predicted and observed in-hospital death. A regional analysisPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1996
- On the Validity of Using Census Geocode Characteristics to Proxy Individual Socioeconomic CharacteristicsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1996
- On the Validity of Using Census Geocode Characteristics to Proxy Individual Socioeconomic CharacteristicsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1996