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Black or Hispanic Kids Receive Less Medical Imaging Than White Kids

A study led by UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine shows that Black children are 18% less likely to get imaging tests as part of their emergency department visit compared with white children. Hispanic children are 13% less likely to have imaging done than whites.

The researchers suggest that this disparity results from overuse in white children, though underuse in minority children probably plays a part as well. The root cause likely stems from both patient preferences and implicit bias among providers.

“Something else is going on here that’s beyond the clinical, that’s beyond the diagnoses,” says study lead author Jennifer Marin, MD, MSc, an associate professor of pediatrics, emergency medicine, and radiology at Pitt, and medical director of point-of-care ultrasound at UPMC Children’s Hospital. “Cultural factors that come with people’s race, gender, religion, etc, should not be associated with testing when getting that test is clearly not beneficial to the patient and potentially harmful.”

The study, published in JAMA Network Openused pediatric emergency department billing data from 52 hospitals across 27 states plus the District of Columbia from 2016 to 2019 to measure racial disparities across all types of diagnostic imaging. This is the largest, broadest study of its kind to date.

Even after controlling for confounding factors, such as health insurance, diagnosis, and household income, the data showed that doctors were ordering significantly fewer imaging tests for Black and Hispanic children than for white children. The effect was even stronger among patients who weren’t admitted to the hospital—suggesting they weren’t severely injured or sick.

While the data cannot distinguish between a test that was warranted and a test that wasn’t, prior research has shown examples of more frequent imaging in white children compared with other races, with no differences in clinical outcomes. The researchers suspect that the differences they see in testing are largely driven by unnecessary testing among whites.

That’s a concern because some forms of imaging, specifically CT scans and X-rays, expose children to radiation, which likely increases their cancer risk.

“An unnecessary CT at 5 years old is not the same as an unnecessary CT at 70 years old,” Marin says. “If you think of it in terms of lifetime risk, a 5-year-old has 80-ish years to go on and develop malignancy, vs. a 70-year-old who only has 15 years.”

False positives and waste in medical spending also are concerns when tests are being ordered unnecessarily.

“We may get an image and the radiologist may see something—and that something may not be of clinical significance—then the child has to be subjected to downstream testing and monitoring,” Marin says. “That’s an added burden and stress on the family and added cost on the health care system.”

Additional authors on the study include Jonathan Rodean, MPP, and Matt Hall, PhD, of Children’s Hospital Association; Elizabeth Alpern, MD, MSCE, of Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine; Paul Aronson, MD, MHS, of Yale School of Medicine; Pradip Chaudhari, MD, of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and Keck School of Medicine of the USC; Eyal Cohen, MD, MSc, of the Hospital for Sick Children; Stephen Freedman, MDCM, MSc, of Alberta Children’s Hospital; Rustin Morse, MD, MMM, of Nationwide Children’s Hospital; Alon Peltz, MD, MBA, of Harvard Medical School; Margaret Samuels-Kalow, MD, MPhil, MSHP, of Massachusetts General Hospital; Samir Shah, MD, MSCE, of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center; Harold Simon, MD, MBA, of Emory University School of Medicine; and Mark Neuman, MD, MPH, of Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Source: UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh/University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine