Research

Black Children More Likely to Die After an Operation Compared to Their White Peers, Study Says

By | Jul 21, 2020 07:30 AM EDT
(Photo : Piron Guillaume on Unsplash)
In a study published in a journal, it indicated that 'Black children are more thrice as likely to die' within one month of operation, compared to white children.


Extensive research, which the journal Pediatrics recently published, has suggested that inequalities exist in surgery results, even among children who are considered healthy.

In the study, the said journal published early this week, it indicated that black children are thrice more likely to die within one month of operation, compared to white children.

Reports also had it that inequalities in surgical results between Black and white patients have been well established with scientists who cited that some of the discrepancy of higher rates of recurring or long-standing conditions among Blacks.

Nevertheless, this research, which studied data on more than 170,000 children, emphasizes the racial inequalities in health results, even when making comparisons among healthy children.

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Research Findings

As mentioned earlier, scientists found that Black children were more than thrice as likely to die within one month following surgery and were more than once as possible to have post-surgical complications.

Specifically, the study authors conducted a previous study which they got from facts and details of children who had undergone surgery or operation from 2012 until 2017.

The study's lead author and pediatric anesthesiologist, Olubukola Nafiu said, scientists were not surprised to discover that healthy children across the board, had excessively low rates of deaths, as well as rates of post-surgical complications.

What surprised them though, Nafiu, from Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio added, was the extent of the dissimilarity in complication and death rates according to race.

Also, according to Nafiu, the hypothesis they had when they started that if a relatively healthy group of patients were studied, there should not be any discrepancy in terms of results.

The researchers recognized the limitations of the paper. They also did not make any further investigation on the area of care where patients got their treatment or the status of insurance of the patients, which they said could be used as a substitute for socioeconomic status.

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Filling the Gap

While Blacks are more likely to get treated in low-performing hospitals, Dr. Nafiu explained, "It may not be the major factor that drives the gap the study found."

With this, the hospitals which the researchers carefully examined were all part of the volunteer program, the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program.

Meaning, they possessed all the resources that they could take part in the program, not to mention the belief that quality improvement is essential.

Aga Khan University's dean of medical college, Adil Haider said, it, the study presented a vital part of the story about racial inequalities in surgical results. However, he added that there were still a lot of questions about what is driving differences.

Numerous studies have shown, Blacks get less, and frequently, worse care compared to white Americans due to reasons which include lower health coverage rates and stereotyping of races. 


Signs of Improvements

A separate study that JAMA published in June suggested some indications of improvements. The said paper, which studied over 20,000 extremely preterm infants, suggested that racial differences in death rates had dropped from 2002 to 2016.

The outcomes were remarkable since racial differences around premature birth, infant death, and mortal death have all been continuing.

According to pediatrician researcher, Dr. Nia Heard-Garris, the research was notable as it depended on a large, national sample.

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