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Original Article|Articles in Press

Neighborhood Poverty and Distance to Pediatric Hospital Care

  • Lauren Brown
    Correspondence
    Correspondence to: Lauren Brown, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women's Hospital, L1 Anesthesia Department, 75 Francis St, MA 02115; Phone: 617-355-7327, Fax: 617-730-0453
    Affiliations
    Boston Children's Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Division of Critical Care, Boston, MA

    Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

    Mass General Brigham, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology
    Search for articles by this author
  • Urbano L. França
    Affiliations
    Boston Children's Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Division of Critical Care, Boston, MA

    Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
    Search for articles by this author
  • Michael L. McManus
    Affiliations
    Boston Children's Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Division of Critical Care, Boston, MA

    Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
    Search for articles by this author
Published:February 05, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2023.01.013

      Abstract

      Objective

      To describe the relationship between neighborhood poverty and geographic access to pediatric inpatient care.

      Methods

      This is a retrospective, cross-sectional study using 2017-2018 hospital and demographic data, as well as geographic data from the 2010 census. Acute care hospitals in seventeen states were included, comprising approximately one third of the national population. The main outcome was distance to capable pediatric hospital care by neighborhood Area Deprivation Index, both overall and by urbanicity.

      Results

      Median distance to pediatric hospital care increased linearly with poverty across Area Deprivation Index national deciles (Pearson coefficient of 0.986; p<0.001). The most advantaged neighborhoods were a median of 2.5 miles from the nearest pediatric capable hospital (IQR 1.2-5.6) while those in the most disadvantaged were a median of 13.8 miles away (IQR 3.3-35.9; p<0.001). The nearest hospital admitted children in 51.17% (7,927) of advantaged neighborhoods (lowest national ADI quintile) and only 26.02% (3,729) of disadvantaged neighborhoods (highest national ADI quintile). The association between poverty and median distance to care was observed in rural, suburban, and urban CBGs (p<0.001 for all trends). In suburban neighborhoods, children from the most disadvantaged neighborhoods were three times as likely as children from the most advantaged neighborhoods to live more than twenty miles from pediatric inpatient care (27.85%, 456,533 of children from bottom quintile neighborhoods vs. 9.24%, 259,787 of children from top quintile neighborhoods, p<0.001).

      Conclusions

      Distances to capable pediatric hospital care are greater from poor than affluent neighborhoods. This carries potential implications for disparities in pediatric health outcomes.

      Keywords

      Abbreviations:

      ADI (Area Deprivation Index), CBG (Census Block Group), HCI (Hospital Capability Index), pHCI (Pediatric Hospital Capability Index)
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