Funding and support: By JACEP Open policy, all authors are required to disclose any and all commercial, financial, and other relationships in any way related to the subject of this article as per ICMJE conflict of interest guidelines (see www.icmje.org). The authors have stated that no such relationships exist.
Conclusion: Given comparable findings in the presence and distribution of abnormalities between POCUS and chest CT, POCUS may be a viable alternative to chest CT for diagnosis and risk stratification in patients with suspected COVID-19.
Study Objectives: Race and sex disparities in health care have been previously documented in the literature. A contributing factor may be "unconscious bias"-the concept that patients may be treated differently due to social stereotypes a provider is unaware they are acting upon. This effect may be more pronounced in busy and stressful environments such as the emergency department. Socioeconomic status and other social determinants of health likely also contribute to disparities in care. Our study objective was to describe patterns in emergency care surrounding race and sex demographics. Subjective measurements included patient satisfaction surveys rating provider empathy and quality of visit. Objective measurements included admission rates and length of stay (LOS). Methods: A descriptive secondary analysis of prospective data collected at a tertiary academic level 1 trauma center emergency department was performed from July to August 2018. All comers were included. A non-physician research assistant asked the patient or family member to complete a survey rating physicians on courtesy, listening, concern for comfort, informed on care, treatment of pain, time waiting, and overall visit. Patient demographics, length of stay, and patient disposition were recorded. Results: 204 patients responded overall. Median satisfaction scores in nearly all categories ranged from 4 (good) to 5 (very good). Median White LOS was 192 minutes vs non-white LOS of 185.5 minutes, Black LOS was 207 minutes. White discharge rate was 47.9% vs 75.6% non-White overall, Black discharge rate was 80%, and Hispanic discharge rate was 74.1%. Male discharge rate was 60.7% vs 58.3% female. Complete Median LOS and % admission rate by race and sex are reported in Table 1. Conclusion: Patient satisfaction scores were comparable across both race and sex. Median LOS and discharge rate by sex was comparable. LOS for Black demographic patients was 15 minutes longer than White patients and 21.5 minutes longer than non-White patients. This may be meaningful particularly given a high discharge rate of 80% for Black patients. Non-White patients overall had a much higher discharge rate from the emergency department compared to White patients. Possible factors for this large difference include lack of insurance, access to primary care, health literacy, and Female (n ¼ 115) 193 (0-582) Discharged: 67 (58.3%) Admit Floor: 48 (41.7%) Volume 76, no. 4s : October 2020 Annals of Emergency Medicine S59 Research Forum Abstracts Conclusion: Given comparable findings in the presence and distribution of abnormalities between POCUS and chest CT, POCUS may be a viable alternative to chest CT for diagnosis and risk stratification in patients with suspected COVID-19.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.