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Race and ethnicity influences outcomes of adult burn patients.

Nicola DiPaoloIan F HulsebosJeremy YuJustin T GillenwaterHaig A Yenikomshian
Published in: Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association (2023)
Outcomes of burn survivors is a growing field of interest; however, there is little data comparing the outcomes of burn survivors by ethnicity. This study seeks to identify any inequities in burn outcomes by racial and ethnic groups. A retrospective chart review of an ABA Certified burn center at a large urban safety net hospital identified adult inpatient admissions from 2015 to 2019. A total of 1142 patients were categorized by primary ethnicity: 142 Black or African American, 72 Asian, 479 Hispanic or Latino, 90 White, 215 other, and 144 patients whose race or ethnicity was unrecorded. Multivariable analyses evaluated the relationship between race and ethnicity and outcomes. Covariate confounders were controlled by adjustment of demographic, social and pre-hospital clinical factors to isolate differences that might not be explained by other factors. After controlling for covariates, Black patients had 29% longer hospital stays (P=.043). Hispanic patients were more likely to be discharged to home or to hospice care (P=.005). Hispanic ethnicity was associated with a 44% decrease in the odds of discharge to acute care, inpatient rehabilitation, or a ward outside the burn unit (P=.022). Black and Hispanic patients had a higher relative chance of having publicly assisted insurance, versus private insurance, than their White counterparts (P=.041, P=.011 respectively). The causes of these inequities are indeterminate. They may stem from socioeconomic status not entirely accounted for, ethnic differences in comorbidity related to stressors, or inequity in health care delivery.
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