Black patients hospitalized for acute hemorrhagic and occlusive stroke incurred more severe cerebrovascular events than white patients across nearly all measured indices (P < .05).
Observational
Do hospitalized black patients have more severe cerebrovascular events compared to white patients?
Hospitalized black patients experience more severe strokes than white patients, highlighting significant racial disparities in cerebrovascular event severity.
p-value: p=<.05
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This study was conducted to determine if blacks hospitalized for cerebrovascular events had more severe cerebrovascular events than whites similarly hospitalized. METHODS: Data from the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission were used to determine incidence of coma, death rates, age at death of those who died, and length of stay for acute hemorrhagic and occlusive stroke in hospitalized blacks and whites after adjusting for sex and, if appropriate, age. RESULTS: With a single exception (number of patients with hemorrhagic stroke who died during short-term hospitalization), all indices indicated that blacks incurred more severe cerebrovascular events than whites (P < .05 or less). CONCLUSIONS: Maryland state data from hospitalized patients indicate that blacks had more severe strokes than whites.
Kuhlemeier et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in acute hemorrhagic and occlusive stroke. Black race vs. White race was evaluated on severity of cerebrovascular events (incidence of coma, death rates, age at death, length of stay) (p=<.05). Black patients hospitalized for acute hemorrhagic and occlusive stroke incurred more severe cerebrovascular events than white patients across nearly all measured indices (P < .05).