Time from hospital presentation to head imaging in White, Black, and Hispanic geriatric trauma patients

Health care disparities have been shown to negatively affect non-White people sustaining traumas, leading to increased morbidity and mortality. One possible explanation could be delays in emergent medical care. This study aims to assess if a disparity between races exists amongst acutely head-injure...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of emergency medicine 2022-09, Vol.59, p.152-155
Hauptverfasser: Alter, Scott M., Temple, C. Abigail, Solano, Joshua J., Hughes, Patrick G., Clayton, Lisa M., Shih, Richard D.
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container_end_page 155
container_issue
container_start_page 152
container_title The American journal of emergency medicine
container_volume 59
creator Alter, Scott M.
Temple, C. Abigail
Solano, Joshua J.
Hughes, Patrick G.
Clayton, Lisa M.
Shih, Richard D.
description Health care disparities have been shown to negatively affect non-White people sustaining traumas, leading to increased morbidity and mortality. One possible explanation could be delays in emergent medical care. This study aims to assess if a disparity between races exists amongst acutely head-injured geriatric patients, as evidenced by the time it takes from emergency department (ED) presentation to performance of head computerized tomography (CT) imaging. A prospective cohort study was conducted from August 15, 2019 to August 14, 2020 at the two trauma centers in a south Florida county covering 1.5 million residents. Patients aged ≥ 65 years who sustained a head injury were identified daily. Patients who had a head injury >24 h prior, sustained penetrating trauma, or were transferred from another hospital were excluded. The primary outcome was time measured between ED presentation and CT head performance. Patients were grouped by race as selected from White, Black, Hispanic, and other. Comparisons were made using ANOVA analysis. 4878 patients were included. 90% were White. The mean times to CT head were 90.3 min for White patients, 98.1 min for Black patients, and 86.6 min for Hispanic patients. There was a significant difference comparing time to CT between the three groups (F = 2.892, p = 0.034). Comparing each group to a combined others, there were no significant differences for White vs non-White (90.3 vs 91.3, F = 0.154, p = 0.695) or Hispanic vs non-Hispanic (86.6 vs 90.5, F = 0.918, p = 0.338); however Black vs non-Black (98.1 vs 89.9, F = 4.828, p = 0.028) was significant. Geriatric Black patients who sustained head trauma were found to have a longer time from ED presentation to performance of head CT than their non-Black counterparts.
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
subjects Black people
Computed tomography
Electronic health records
Emergency medical care
Emergency medical services
Ethnicity
Geriatrics
Head injuries
Head trauma
Health care
Hemorrhage
Hispanic people
Illnesses
Inequality
Medical records
Morbidity
Mortality
Patients
Race
Racial differences
Racial disparities
Stroke
Trauma
Trauma centers
Traumatic brain injury
Variables
Variance analysis
White people
title Time from hospital presentation to head imaging in White, Black, and Hispanic geriatric trauma patients
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