AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the relationship between social drivers of health (SDoH) and outcomes for children on ECMO, focusing on a range of factors like race, income, and access to healthcare.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 540 pediatric ECMO cases over nearly a decade, noting a 44% in-hospital mortality rate and various health issues impacting the children.
  • The findings reveal that SDoH, including the Child Opportunity Index, did not show a significant association with ECMO outcomes, indicating a need for more research to understand the factors influencing health disparities in pediatric patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Relationships between social drivers of health (SDoH) and pediatric health outcomes are highly complex with substantial inconsistencies in studies examining SDoH and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) outcomes. To add to this literature with emerging novel SDoH measures, and to address calls for institutional accountability, we examined associations between SDoH and pediatric ECMO outcomes.

Methods: This single-center retrospective cohort study included children (<18 years) supported on ECMO (2012-2021). SDoH included Child Opportunity Index (COI), race, ethnicity, payer, interpreter requirement, urbanicity, and travel-time to hospital. COI is a multidimensional estimation of SDoH incorporating traditional (eg, income) and novel (eg, healthy food access) neighborhood attributes ([range 0-100] higher indicates healthier child development). Outcomes included in-hospital mortality, ECMO run duration, and length of stay (LOS).

Results: 540 children on ECMO (96%) had a calculable COI. In-hospital mortality was 44% with median run duration of 125 hours and ICU LOS 29 days. Overall, 334 (62%) had cardiac disease, 92 (17%) neonatal respiratory failure, 93 (17%) pediatric respiratory failure, and 21 (4%) sepsis. Median COI was 64 (interquartile range 32-81), 323 (60%) had public insurance, 174 (34%) were from underrepresented racial groups, 57 (11%) required interpreters, 270 (54%) had urban residence, and median travel-time was 89 minutes. SDoH including COI were not statistically associated with outcomes in univariate or multivariate analysis.

Conclusions: We observed no significant difference in pediatric ECMO outcomes according to SDoH. Further research is warranted to better understand drivers of inequitable health outcomes in children, and potential protective mechanisms.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2023-061305DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

social drivers
8
drivers health
8
extracorporeal membrane
8
membrane oxygenation
8
sdoh pediatric
8
health pediatric
4
pediatric extracorporeal
4
oxygenation outcomes
4
outcomes background
4
background relationships
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!