Volume 41 | Number 4p1 | August 2006

Abstract List

Dana B. Mukamel Ph.D., David L. Weimer Ph.D., Alvin I. Mushlin


Objective

To examine the referral process to cardiac surgeons in order to explain racial disparities in access to high‐quality cardiac surgeons.


Data Sources/Study Settings

All white and black Medicare fee‐for‐service patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery in New York State during 1997–1999.


Study Design

A retrospective analysis of referral patterns for white and black patients in relation to the quality of the cardiac surgeon, measured by the surgeon's risk‐adjusted mortality rate (RAMR), and in relation to characteristics of the physician providing the majority of cardiac care before the surgery. The average RAMRs of the surgeons to whom different physicians referred patients were compared using ‐tests and paired ‐tests. A hierarchical multivariate regression model was estimated to test hypotheses about the effect of physicians' characteristics on referrals of blacks to low‐quality surgeons.


Data Extraction Method

Variables were constructed from Medicare claims.


Principal Findings

The differential in surgeons' quality for white and black patients is partially due to the physician providing the majority of cardiac care before the surgery. There is both across‐ and within‐physician variation in referrals. Of the physician characteristics investigated, only the number of black patients referred to CABG and the percent of all cardiac referrals to the same hospital decrease the difference in surgeons' quality between whites and blacks.


Conclusions

Several different pathways lead blacks to cardiac surgeons of lower quality. Further research is needed to understand the causes and inform policies designed to minimize disparities in access to high‐quality providers.