Health & Fitness
Blacks Had Higher Rates Of Avoidable Non-COVID Hospitalizations
During the early months of the pandemic, whites were better able to avoid hospitalizations for unrelated conditions due to outpatient access
LOS ANGELES, CA — During the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic, white people spent dramatically less time in the hospital for ailments unrelated to the coronavirus than Black patients suffering from similar medical conditions, according to a study of UCLA Health hospitals.
The findings reflect inequities in access to medical treatment between white and Black people, according to the study's authors. The study indicates that long-standing medical inequities were exacerbated by the pandemic. In a nutshell, people with adequate access to outpatient medical care were less likely to develop acute conditions requiring hospitalization. Dr. Richard Leuchter, a resident physician at UCLA Health and lead author of the study,called on community action to address the problem.
White people experienced a far larger drop in hospitalizations during the first six months of the pandemic when people sought to avoid hospitals. Black people may have had worse access than whites to outpatient care that could have helped prevent deterioration of their non-COVID-19 health conditions, said Leuchter.
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Hospitalizations -- for conditions ranging from diabetes and asthma to hypertension -- disproportionately expose Black individuals to the financial burdens of missing work and hospital costs, separate them from their families and increase their risk of hospital-acquired infections, UCLA researchers say.
"At a time when large-scale community activism has brought attention to systemic racial injustices, it's important to bring these inequities to light so that action can be taken," Leuchter said.
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"While these findings are limited to UCLA Health, these problems represent a systemwide challenge for health care that cannot be addressed through the actions of a single institution."
The physician added that it's "within our power as a society to reallocate resources to combat these serious health inequities. We need widespread community action."
Consistent with national trends that emerged as patients avoided hospitals treating individuals with COVID-19, potentially avoidable hospitalizations dropped across UCLA Health hospitals during the pandemic.
Research into the phenomenon is ongoing, but Leuchter's study suggests that the potential benefits associated with avoiding a hospital stay were not shared equally among white and Black patients.
The researchers examined records for patients admitted to UCLA Health hospitals between March 1 and Aug. 31, 2020, and compared them with hospitalizations during the same pre-pandemic months of 2019.
Patients were admitted for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, hypertension, congestive heart failure, community-acquired pneumonia, uncontrolled diabetes and diabetes complications, and urinary tract infections.
People with these conditions can often avoid hospitalization with appropriate outpatient treatment.
The researchers found that out of 4,838 hospitalizations during the 2020 time period, 347 (7.2%) were potentially avoidable, compared with 557 out of 6,248 (8.9%) hospitalizations during the same six-month period in 2019.
While such hospitalizations dropped by 50% for non-Hispanic whites from 2019 to 2020, they dropped a statistically insignificant 8% for Black patients.
In addition to the wide disparity between white and Black patients, the researchers found that avoidable hospitalizations fell 32.3% for Latinos and 16.1% for Asians over the same periods, although they note that the "relative differences in magnitudes of reduction were only statistically significant between African American and non-Hispanic white patients."
The study has some limitations, the researchers say. For instance, it did not take into account factors like comorbidities or socioeconomic status that could contribute to health disparities.
In addition, the sample was confined to a single health system, there was an assumption that the population pools from 2019 and 2020 were similar, and some patients may have received false negative results on COVID-19 tests, leading doctors to admit them for pneumonia, which the study classifies as a potentially avoidable hospitalization.
However, the findings could still guide health officials in identifying racial and ethnic groups with largely treatable conditions and ensuring that they have access to outpatient care that could prevent unnecessary hospitalizations, Leuchter said.
"A campaign to reduce avoidable hospital admissions could have an enormous positive impact on people of color by minimizing the harms to which they are exposed through such hospitalizations," he said.
City News Service and Patch Staffer contributed to this report.
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