The Morning Call (Sunday)

Study: Black, Latino children receive fewer medical imaging tests

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By Sarah Gantz

Black and Latino children are less likely than white children to receive medical imaging tests, such as ultrasound­s, MRIs and X-rays, during emergency department visits, according to a new study by researcher­s at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

The findings, published Friday in JAMA Open Network, suggest an underuse of imaging among minority children and overuse among white children. Researcher­s attributed the disparity to a range of factors, including bias among doctors whose treatment decisions are influenced by patients’ race.

“Something else is going on here that’s beyond the clinical, that’s beyond the diagnoses,” said Dr. Jennifer Marin, an associate professor of pediatrics, emergency medicine, and radiology at Pitt and the study’s lead author.

Researcher­s studied billing data for more than 13 million emergency department visits among children at 52 hospitals in 27 states and the District of Columbia between 2016 and 2019. Even after controllin­g for factors such as insurance coverage, household income, and diagnosis, researcher­s found emergency department­s ordered far fewer imaging tests for Black and Latino children, compared to white children:

Black children were 18% less likely than white children to receive medical imaging as part of their emergency department visit.

Latino children were 13% less likely than white children to receive imaging tests.

Marin said there are several factors that could be contributi­ng to the gap, such as heightened anxiety and demand for testing among white parents, language barriers that result in more or less testing among Latino children, and implicit bias among doctors.

Implicit bias is when a doctor’s medical decisions are influenced by unconsciou­s attitudes, beliefs or stereotype­s about people of different races and ethnicity.

Other studies have found that implicit bias often results in minority patients receiving less care and experienci­ng worse health care outcomes.

For instance, Black women are less likely to receive pain medication in labor and more likely to die during childbirth compared to white patients.

Black children diagnosed with type 1 diabetes are less likely than white children to receive advanced technology to help manage their autoimmune condition and experience higher rates of complicati­ons.

One major limitation of the study is that billing data cannot help researcher­s determine how sick children were when they arrived at the emergency department or whether the imaging ordered was necessary. Could white children be receiving more medical imaging because they are sicker when they arrive at the hospital?

Probably not, Marin said. When researcher­s looked specifical­ly at cases where the child had been discharged from the emergency department — meaning they were not sick enough to be admitted to the hospital — they found even larger racial gaps in testing.

Marin called on hospitals to dig into their own data to see to what extent the trend is playing out in their own emergency department­s.

“The first solution is awareness — we’ve brought this to light, there’s clearly a problem. It then becomes important for local emergency department­s to look internally at their data,” Marin said. “Really seeing that personaliz­ed data can be very eye-opening for physicians . ... I think people would want to know if they’re treating children differentl­y just based on their race.”

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