Hospital quality, Medicaid expansion, and racial/ethnic disparities in maternal mortality and morbidity
医院质量、医疗补助扩大以及孕产妇死亡率和发病率的种族/民族差异
基本信息
- 批准号:10174152
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 69.91万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2020
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2020-09-17 至 2025-06-30
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AccountingAddressAdultAreaBiometryBirth CertificatesBypassCaliforniaCaringCitiesClinicalDataData SetDiscipline of obstetricsEconomicsEligibility DeterminationEthnic OriginFloridaGeographyHealth PolicyHealth Services ResearchHealthcare SystemsHispanicsHospitalsIncidenceIncomeIndividualInsuranceInvestigationLinkLouisianaMassachusettsMaternal MortalityMeasuresMedicaidMedicalMinorityMissouriMorbidity - disease rateMothersNatural experimentNeonatologyNew York CityNewborn InfantOutcomePatientsPennsylvaniaPerinatal EpidemiologyPlayPoliciesPopulationPregnancyPublic HealthQuality of CareRaceRecordsReportingResearchRiskRoleRuralRural PopulationSocioeconomic StatusSouth CarolinaStandardizationStructureTimeTranscendTravelUrban HospitalsUrban PopulationVariantVery Low Birth Weight InfantVital StatisticsWashingtonWomanWorkadverse maternal outcomesadverse outcomecare providerscost effectivedesigndisparities in morbiditydisparity reductioneffective interventionethnic differenceexperiencefederal poverty levelhealth care deliveryhealth care disparityhealth disparityinnovationmaternal morbiditymaternal outcomeracial and ethnicracial and ethnic disparitiesracial disparityracial minorityracismresearch studyrural areasafety netsevere maternal morbiditysociodemographicssocioeconomics
项目摘要
Abstract: Racial and ethnic disparities in maternal adverse outcomes remain a significant public health
problem. Studies conducted in New York City (NYC) hospitals have shown that minority women are more likely
to deliver in low-quality hospitals and that they are also at a higher within-hospital risk of severe maternal
morbidity (SMM) than white women, even after accounting for type of insurance. Although these studies
represent important pointers in our understanding of SMM disparities, there are still many open questions
about how quality of delivery hospitals drives the higher rates in adverse outcomes observed for minority
women. First, it is unknown whether racial/ethnic differences in delivery hospital quality (between and within)
exist in cities or regions other than NYC, especially in rural areas. Second, there is little information on the
reasons for differences in where women of different racial/ethnic status deliver. Third, previous efforts
examining racial disparities in healthcare delivery have mainly focused on individual-level factors overlooking
the broader macro-level societal and structural conditions (e.g., structural racism) that may be at play. Finally, it
is unknown how important policies such as Medicaid expansion have impacted obstetric hospital quality,
especially minority- and rural-serving hospitals. Research studies investigating higher level factors that
transcend individual-level factors to explain racial/ethnic disparities in maternal outcomes are urgently needed
to design effective interventions. Thus, the proposed study will address the following: 1) Determine the
contribution of delivery hospital quality to racial/ethnic disparities in maternal mortality and SMM; 2) Examine
within-hospital racial/ethnic disparities in risk-adjusted maternal mortality and severe morbidity and identify
whether these disparities are associated with types of medical insurance and broader societal and structural
conditions; 3) Determine societal- and individual-level maternal factors associated with using versus bypassing
high-quality hospitals; 4) Identify the impact of expanded Medicaid income eligibility to adults earning up to
138% federal poverty level on: (Aim 4a) hospital quality (especially safety-net and rural-serving hospitals); and
(Aim 4b) the incidence of maternal mortality and SMM, either overall or by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic
status. We will use birth certificate data linked to hospital discharge data and supplemented by other datasets
from eight U.S. states from 2000-2019 to develop a risk-adjusted maternal mortality and SMM composite
outcome which will allow us to rank hospitals. We will subsequently use hospital ranking to examine the
contribution of hospital quality to racial/ethnic disparities. The aim on Medicaid expansion will make use of a
natural experiment framework and difference-in-difference analysis resulting in comparing each state to itself,
before and after Medicaid expansion. At the end of the study, we will have a better understanding of
racial/ethnic disparities in the health care system among all mothers in eight states and will identify potential
areas for improvement that can have profound implications on reducing disparities.
翻译后摘要:种族和民族的差异,孕产妇不良后果仍然是一个重要的公共卫生
问题.在纽约市(NYC)医院进行的研究表明,少数民族妇女更有可能
在低质量的医院分娩,而且她们在医院内患严重孕产妇死亡的风险也更高。
发病率(SMM)高于白色妇女,即使在考虑保险类型后。尽管这些研究
代表了我们理解SMM差异的重要指针,但仍有许多悬而未决的问题
关于分娩医院的质量如何导致少数群体观察到的不良结局的发生率更高,
妇女首先,目前尚不清楚分娩医院质量的种族/民族差异(之间和内部)
存在于纽约市以外的城市或地区,特别是农村地区。第二,关于
不同种族/民族地位的妇女在分娩地点方面存在差异的原因。第三,以往的努力
研究医疗服务中的种族差异主要集中在个人层面的因素上,
更广泛的宏观层面的社会和结构条件(例如,结构性种族主义),可能正在发挥作用。最后
目前还不清楚医疗补助扩张等重要政策对产科医院质量的影响,
特别是为少数民族和农村服务的医院。研究调查更高层次的因素,
迫切需要超越个人层面的因素来解释孕产妇结局中的种族/民族差异
设计有效的干预措施。因此,拟议的研究将解决以下问题:1)确定
分娩医院质量对孕产妇死亡率和SMM中种族/民族差异的贡献; 2)检查
医院内经风险调整的孕产妇死亡率和严重发病率的种族/民族差异,并确定
这些差异是否与医疗保险类型以及更广泛的社会和结构有关
条件; 3)确定与使用与旁路相关的社会和个人水平的母体因素
高质量的医院; 4)确定扩大医疗补助收入资格对收入达到
(目标4a)医院质量(特别是安全网和农村服务医院);
(Aim 4 b)孕产妇死亡率和SMM发生率,无论是总体还是按种族/族裔和社会经济分类
status.我们将使用与出院数据相关联的出生证明数据,并辅以其他数据集
从2000年到2019年,来自美国八个州的研究人员开发了一个风险调整后的孕产妇死亡率和SMM复合指标。
这将使我们能够对医院进行排名。我们随后将使用医院排名来检查
医院质量对种族/民族差异的贡献。扩大医疗补助的目标将利用一个
自然实验框架和差异中的差异分析导致将每个状态与其自身进行比较,
医疗补助扩张前后在研究结束时,我们将更好地了解
八个州所有母亲在保健系统中的种族/民族差异,并将确定潜在的
可以对缩小差距产生深远影响的改进领域。
项目成果
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{{ truncateString('Nansi Boghossian', 18)}}的其他基金
Hospital quality, Medicaid expansion, and racial/ethnic disparitiesin maternal mortality and morbidity
医院质量、医疗补助扩大以及孕产妇死亡率和发病率的种族/民族差异
- 批准号:
10654573 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 69.91万 - 项目类别:
Hospital quality, Medicaid expansion, and racial/ethnic disparitiesin maternal mortality and morbidity
医院质量、医疗补助扩大以及孕产妇死亡率和发病率的种族/民族差异
- 批准号:
10427431 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 69.91万 - 项目类别:
Hospital quality, Medicaid expansion, and racial/ethnic disparities in maternal mortality and morbidity
医院质量、医疗补助扩大以及孕产妇死亡率和发病率的种族/民族差异
- 批准号:
10266168 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 69.91万 - 项目类别:
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