Yale Bulletin and Calendar

May 18, 2001Volume 29, Number 30



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Study shows both black and white doctors
refer fewer black patients for heart procedure

In one of the largest national studies on the topic, Yale researchers have demonstrated that far more white patients than black patients are referred for cardiac catheterization, a diagnostic procedure used to assess heart function after a myocardial infarction or heart attack.

Furthermore, these differences in practice, researchers say, are present whether or not the patients received care from a black physician or a white physician.

Published in the May 10 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, the study showed that cardiac catheterization rates for white patients were almost 40% higher than cardiac catheterization rates for black patients, even after adjusting for clinical differences between the groups. For every 100 black patients who had a heart attack, 12 fewer patients underwent cardiac catheterization compared with similar white patients.

"Despite these differences in care, survival was similar among black and white patients up to three years after their hospitalization for the heart attack," says Dr. Harlan Krumholz, associate professor of internal medicine and cardiology at the School of Medicine and senior author on the study.

The issue of racial disparities in health care and outcomes has received substantial attention. Krumholz says most investigations have focused on documenting differences in care by race or sex, but his investigation extends previous work by examining the effect of physician race on differences in care.

"Concerns that racial differences in procedure use only reflected the behaviors of white physicians are not supported by the findings," says Dr. Jersey Chen, first author and a medical student at the time the study was completed. "Racial differences in cardiac catheterization rates were also present among patients who received care from black physicians."

Using data from the Cooperative Cardiovascular Project, a study of Medicare beneficiaries hospitalized for acute myocardial infarction in 1994 and 1995, the team evaluated whether disparities between black and white patients in the use of cardiac catheterization varied according to the race of their attending physician.

They found that of 35,676 white and 4,039 black patients with acute myocardial infarction, physicians of both races referred white patients for catheterization about 40% more often than black patients.

"While the study cannot preclude the existence of racial bias or prejudice, it does suggest that if physician factors contribute to racial differences in cardiac catheterization use, be it by beliefs or attitudes, then these factors are apparently common to both white physicians and black physicians," says Saif Rathore, a coauthor on the study.

Krumholz says the findings underscore the complexity of the issue. "We did find substantial differences in the rates of cardiac catheterization that could not be explained by racial differences in the clinical characteristics of the patients, their physicians or the type of hospitals where they received treatment," he says. "We could not illuminate the reasons for these differences."

"The fact that survival rates among both races were similar despite differences in procedure use is an interesting feature of this study," Krumholz adds. "We could find no evidence that these differences in procedure use translated into differences in survival. The finding raises the question about whether the referral rate was too high for white patients rather than being too low for black patients. We would need more information about the indications for the procedures and the health outcomes of the patients to investigate this issue further."

As part of the Cooperative Cardiovascular Project, medical records from more than 200,000 hospitalizations nationwide were abstracted for information and analyzed for quality of care. Faculty from Yale, including Krumholz and Dr. Martha Radford, participated in the planning and implementation of the Health Care Financing Administration Project.

Study authors included Krumholz, Chen, Rathore, Radford and data manager Yun Wang.

-- By Karen Peart


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ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

Devoted Yale alumnus and benefactor John J. Lee dies

Noted legal scholar and humanist Charles L. Black Jr. dies

Commencement Information


MEDICAL NEWS

Graduate School to honor outstanding faculty mentors

Architecture students rise to the task of making a home

Psychologist Edward Zigler is lauded for lifetime achievements

Men's golf team to compete in regional championship

Yale recognized as 'good neighbor'

New 'Smile Carts' honor Yale nurse practitioner and the memory of alumnus

Grant to fund F&ES scholarships

YUWO scholarships to further studies and enhance careers awarded to Yale affiliates

Commencement Concert to mark closing of Morse Recital Hall for renovations

Yale senior's essay on life in New Haven wins first Hegel Prize



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