Skip to main content
Article
Minority trauma patients tend to cluster at trauma centers with worse-than-expected mortality: Can this phenomenon help explain racial disparities in trauma outcomes?
Annals of Surgery
  • Adil H Haider, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Zain G Hashmi, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Syed Nabeel Zafar, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
  • Xuan Hui, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Eric B Schneider, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • David T Efron, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Elliott R Haut, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Lisa A Cooper, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore
  • Ellen J MacKenzie, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore
  • Edward E Cornwell, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
Publication Date
10-1-2013
Document Type
Article
Abstract

Objectives: To determine whether minority trauma patients are more commonly treated at trauma centers (TCs) with worse observed-to-expected (O/E) survival.
Background: Racial disparities in survival after traumatic injury have been described. However, the mechanisms that lead to these inequities are not well understood.
Methods: Analysis of level I/II TCs included in the National Trauma Data Bank 2007-2010. White, Black, and Hispanic patients 16 years or older sustaining blunt/penetrating injuries with an Injury Severity Score of 9 or more were included. TCs with 50% or more Hispanic or Black patients were classified as predominantly minority TCs. Multivariate logistic regression adjusting for several patient/injury characteristics was used to predict the expected number of deaths for each TC. O/E mortality ratios were then generated and used to rank individual TCs as low (O/E <1), intermediate, or high mortality (O/E >1).
Results: A total of 556,720 patients from 181 TCs were analyzed; 86 TCs (48%) were classified as low mortality, 6 (3%) intermediate, and 89 (49%) as high mortality. More of the predominantly minority TCs [(82% (22/27) vs 44% (67/154)] were classified as high mortality (P < 0.001). Approximately 64% of Black patients (55,673/87,575) were treated at high-mortality TCs compared with 54% Hispanics (32,677/60,761) and 41% Whites (165,494/408,384) (P < 0.001).
Conclusions: Minority trauma patients are clustered at hospitals with significantly higher-than-expected mortality. Black and Hispanic patients treated at low-mortality hospitals have a significantly lower odds of death than similar patients treated at high-mortality hospitals. Differences in TC outcomes and quality of care may partially explain trauma outcomes disparities.

Comments

This work was published before the author joined Aga Khan University

Citation Information
Adil H Haider, Zain G Hashmi, Syed Nabeel Zafar, Xuan Hui, et al.. "Minority trauma patients tend to cluster at trauma centers with worse-than-expected mortality: Can this phenomenon help explain racial disparities in trauma outcomes?" Annals of Surgery Vol. 258 Iss. 4 (2013) p. 572 - 579
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/adil_haider/19/