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COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Variation in emergency department wait times for children by race/ethnicity and payment source.
Health Services Research 2009 December
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the variation in emergency department (ED) wait times by patient race/ethnicity and payment source, and to divide the overall association into between- and within-hospital components.
DATA SOURCE: 2005 and 2006 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys.
STUDY DESIGN: Linear regression was used to analyze the independent associations between race/ethnicity, payment source, and ED wait times in a pooled cross-sectional design. A hybrid fixed effects specification was used to measure the between- and within-hospital components.
DATA EXTRACTION METHODS: Data were limited to children under 16 years presenting at EDs.
PRINCIPAL RESULTS: Unadjusted and adjusted ED wait times were significantly longer for non-Hispanic black and Hispanic children than for non-Hispanic white children. Children in EDs with higher shares of non-Hispanic black and Hispanic children waited longer. Moreover, Hispanic children waited 10.4 percent longer than non-Hispanic white children when treated at the same hospital. ED wait times for children did not vary significantly by payment source.
CONCLUSIONS: There are sizable racial/ethnic differences in children's ED wait times that can be attributed to both the racial/ethnic mix of children in EDs and to differential treatment by race/ethnicity inside the ED.
DATA SOURCE: 2005 and 2006 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys.
STUDY DESIGN: Linear regression was used to analyze the independent associations between race/ethnicity, payment source, and ED wait times in a pooled cross-sectional design. A hybrid fixed effects specification was used to measure the between- and within-hospital components.
DATA EXTRACTION METHODS: Data were limited to children under 16 years presenting at EDs.
PRINCIPAL RESULTS: Unadjusted and adjusted ED wait times were significantly longer for non-Hispanic black and Hispanic children than for non-Hispanic white children. Children in EDs with higher shares of non-Hispanic black and Hispanic children waited longer. Moreover, Hispanic children waited 10.4 percent longer than non-Hispanic white children when treated at the same hospital. ED wait times for children did not vary significantly by payment source.
CONCLUSIONS: There are sizable racial/ethnic differences in children's ED wait times that can be attributed to both the racial/ethnic mix of children in EDs and to differential treatment by race/ethnicity inside the ED.
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