Pediatric Hospitalizations for Asthma: Use of a Linked File to Separate Person-level Risk and Readmission

Introduction Disparities in asthma hospitalization by gender, age, and race/ethnicity are thought to be driven by a combination of 2 factors: disease severity and inadequate health care. Hospitalization data that fail to differentiate between numbers of admissions and numbers of individuals limit the ability to derive accurate conclusions about disparities and risks. Methods Hospitalization records for pediatric asthma patients (aged one to 14 years) were extracted from New Jersey Hospital Discharge Files (for the years 1994 through 2000) and then linked by patient identifiers using a probabilistic matching algorithm. The analysis file contained 30,400 hospital admissions for 21,016 children. Hospitalization statistics were decomposed into persons hospitalized and number of hospitalizations. Analysis of readmission within 180 days of discharge used additional records from 2001 to avoid bias due to truncated observation. Results Overall, 22.9% of children in our analysis had repeat asthma admissions within the same age interval, accounting for 30.9% of all hospitalizations. Also among all children, 11.7% had at least one readmission within 180 days of a prior discharge. The risk of hospitalization was higher for boys, decreased by age for both genders, was lowest for white children and highest for black children. Readmission rates were higher for black and Hispanic girls than boys in older age groups, but were otherwise relatively uniform by gender and age. Conclusion Decomposition of ratios of total hospitalizations to population illuminates components of risk and suggests specific causes of disparity.

[1]  F. Martinez Toward asthma prevention--does all that really matters happen before we learn to read? , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  Phil A. Silva,et al.  A longitudinal, population-based, cohort study of childhood asthma followed to adulthood. , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  K. Øymar,et al.  Hospital admissions for childhood asthma in Rogaland, Norway, from 1984 to 2000 , 2003, Acta paediatrica.

[4]  Kevin B Weiss,et al.  Asthma medication use and disease burden in children in a primary care population. , 2003, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[5]  L. Akinbami,et al.  Trends in childhood asthma: prevalence, health care utilization, and mortality. , 2002, Pediatrics.

[6]  T. Lieu,et al.  Racial/ethnic variation in asthma status and management practices among children in managed medicaid. , 2002, Pediatrics.

[7]  D. Mannino,et al.  Surveillance for asthma--United States, 1980-1999. , 2002, Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Surveillance summaries.

[8]  T. Klaukka,et al.  Hospitalization trends for paediatric asthma in eastern Finland: a 10-yr survey , 1999, European Respiratory Journal.

[9]  H. Anderson,et al.  Asthma hospitalizations in Wisconsin: a missed opportunity for prevention. , 2000, WMJ : official publication of the State Medical Society of Wisconsin.

[10]  C. Aligne,et al.  Risk factors for pediatric asthma. Contributions of poverty, race, and urban residence. , 2000, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[11]  K. Carlsen,et al.  Trends in hospital admissions for childhood asthma in Oslo, Norway, 1980–95 , 2000, Allergy.

[12]  Jane E. Miller,et al.  The effects of race/ethnicity and income on early childhood asthma prevalence and health care use. , 2000, American journal of public health.

[13]  J. Halterman,et al.  Inadequate therapy for asthma among children in the United States. , 2000, Pediatrics.

[14]  S. Nimmagadda,et al.  Allergy: etiology and epidemiology. , 1999, Pediatrics in review.

[15]  Asthma hospitalizations and readmissions among children and young adults--Wisconsin, 1991-1995. , 1997, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[16]  D R Ownby,et al.  Ethnic differences in the prevalence of asthma in middle class children. , 1997, Annals of allergy, asthma & immunology : official publication of the American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology.

[17]  T. To,et al.  A cohort study on childhood asthma admissions and readmissions. , 1996, Pediatrics.

[18]  P. Szilagyi,et al.  Does quality of care affect rates of hospitalization for childhood asthma? , 1996, Pediatrics.

[19]  Matthew A. Jaro,et al.  Probabilistic linkage of large public health data files. , 1995, Statistics in medicine.

[20]  Randall Brown,et al.  Quality of care for preschool children with asthma: the role of social factors and practice setting. , 1995, Pediatrics.

[21]  J L Freeman,et al.  Variations in rates of hospitalization of children in three urban communities. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.