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Ethnicity and pre-hospital care for people with suspected cardiac pain: cross-sectional study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-05, 10:56 authored by Zahid AsgharZahid Asghar, Viet-Hai PhungViet-Hai Phung, Niro Siriwardena
<p>Objectives Few studies have investigated the quality of pre-hospital care by ethnicity. We aimed to investigate ethnic differences in pre-hospital ambulance care of patients with suspected cardiac pain.Methods We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of retrospective electronic clinical data for patients with suspected cardiac pain over one year (August 2011 to July 2012) extracted from a single regional ambulance service. This included patient demographic data, clinical measurements, drugs administered and outcomes, such as transportation to hospital or referral to primary care. We used multivariate regression to investigate differences in care by ethnicity comparing non-White with White patients.Results There were 7046 patients with suspected cardiac pain, with 4825 who had ethnicity recorded including 4661 (96.6%) White and 164 (3.4%) non-White. After correcting for age, sex, socio-economic status and whether transported to hospital, non-White patients were significantly more likely to have temperature [odds ratio (OR) 2.96, P = 0.007], blood glucose (OR 3.95, P = 0.003), respiratory rate (OR 4.94, P = 0.03) and oxygen saturation (OR 2.43, P = 0.006) recorded. Non-White patients were significantly less likely to be transported to hospital (OR 0.43, P = 0.03).Conclusion There were significant differences in pre-hospital ambulance care for non-White compared with White patients with suspected cardiac pain. These differences could be due to differences in clinical condition or case-mix, language and cultural barriers, limited understanding of appropriate use of health care services, recording bias or true differences in provider management. Further analysis should involve larger and more complete data sets to explore ethnic differences in greater detail.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Care Sciences (Research Outputs)
  • Lincoln Institute for Rural and Coastal Health (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice

Volume

22

Issue

5

Pages/Article Number

721-725

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1356-1294

eISSN

1365-2753

Date Submitted

2016-03-15

Date Accepted

2016-01-25

Date of First Publication

2016-03-10

Date of Final Publication

2016-10-01

Event Name

Making an Impact: what's new in emergency prehospital care research?

Event Dates

27-Feb-13

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2016-03-10

ePrints ID

22475

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A

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