Chest
1998 May;113(5):1277-84.
Race, income, urbanicity, and asthma hospitalization in California: a small
area analysis.
Ray NF, Thamer M, Fadillioglu B, Gergen PJ.
Medical Technology and Practice Patterns Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To explicate the interrelationship
between asthma hospitalization and race/ethnicity and income.
DESIGN: Small area ecologic analysis using census and
administrative data.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: All asthma hospitalizations
in California were identified using the 1993 California Hospital Discharge
file. Small area analyses of Los Angeles (LA) were compared with published
rates in New York City (NYC).
RESULTS: In 1993, the age-adjusted asthma hospitalization
rate in California for nonelderly blacks was 42.5/10,000-approximately
four times higher than other populations. Black rates remained fourfold
higher after stratification by age, income, and urbanicity. Multivariate
analyses suggest that the association between black race and asthma hospitalization
is independent of income. Regardless of race, children and persons living
in poverty were at increased risk for asthma hospitalization. Urbanicity
was not a predictor for asthma hospitalization. Overall, asthma hospitalization
rates in NYC were 2.8 times higher compared with rates in LA; while rates
were similar among blacks (60 vs 40/10,000, respectively), Puerto Rican
Hispanics in NYC had dramatically higher rates compared with Mexican Hispanics
in LA (63 vs 14/10,000, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: After controlling for socioeconomic status,
notable differences in asthma hospitalization by race and ethnicity persist.
The reasons for the significantly elevated risk of asthma morbidity among
blacks remain unclear.
PMID: 9596306 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]