Ethnicity and outcomes for patients with gastrointestinal disorders attending an emergency department serving a multi-ethnic population
Christopher A. Martin, Tim Coats, Manish Pareek, Kamlesh Khunti, Ruw Abeyratne, Nigel J. Brunskill

TL;DR
This study found that minority ethnic patients with gastrointestinal issues are less likely to be hospitalized or investigated compared to white patients, even after adjusting for factors like age and illness severity.
Contribution
The study reveals persistent ethnic disparities in emergency care outcomes for gastrointestinal disorders, independent of socioeconomic and clinical factors.
Findings
Minority ethnic patients were significantly less likely to be investigated or admitted to hospital compared to white patients.
Adjustments for age, deprivation, and illness severity did not eliminate the disparities in care outcomes.
Mixed and Black ethnic groups had the lowest rates of clinical investigations and hospital admissions.
Abstract
Ethnic inequalities in acute health acute care are not well researched. We examined how attendee ethnicity influenced outcomes of emergency care in unselected patients presenting with a gastrointestinal (GI) disorder. A descriptive, retrospective cohort analysis of anonymised patient level data for University Hospitals of Leicester emergency department attendees, from 1 January 2018 to 31 December 2021, receiving a diagnosis of a GI disorder was performed. The primary exposure of interest was self-reported ethnicity, and the two outcomes studied were admission to hospital and whether patients underwent clinical investigations. Confounding variables including sex and age, deprivation index and illness acuity were adjusted for in the analysis. Chi-squared and Kruskal–Wallis tests were used to examine ethnic differences across outcome measures and covariates. Multivariable logistic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmergency and Acute Care Studies · Migration, Health and Trauma · Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
