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Disparity in Race-Specific Comorbidities Associated With Central Venous Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infection (AHRQ-PSI7)
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Disparity in Race-Specific Comorbidities Associated With Central Venous Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infection (AHRQ-PSI7)

James Studnicki, Bola F. Ekezue, Maka M Tsulukidze, Peggy Honore, Ramal Moonesinghe and John W Fisher
American journal of medical quality, Vol.28(6), pp.525-532
11-01-2013
PMCID: PMC5836730
PMID: 23526359

Abstract

Health Care Sciences & Services Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
Studies of racial disparities in hospital-level patient safety outcomes typically apply a race-common approach to risk adjustment. Risk factors specific to a minority population may not be identified in a race-common analysis if they represent only a small percentage of total cases. This study identified patient comorbidities and characteristics associated with the likelihood of a venous catheter-related bloodstream infection (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Patient Safety Indicator 7 [PSI7]) separately for blacks and whites using race-specific logistic regression models. Hospitals were ranked by the racial disparity in PSI7 and segmented into 4 groups. The analysis identified both black- and white-specific risk factors associated with PSI7. Age showed race-specific reverse association, with younger blacks and older whites more likely to have a PSI7 event. These findings suggest the need for race-specific covariate adjustments in patient outcomes and provide a new context for examining racial disparities.
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