%0 Journal Article %T Racial variations in processes of care for patients with community-acquired pneumonia %A Eric M Mortensen %A John Cornell %A Jeff Whittle %J BMC Health Services Research %D 2004 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1472-6963-4-20 %X We reviewed the records of all identified Medicare beneficiaries hospitalized for pneumonia between 10/1/1998 and 9/30/1999 at one of 101 Pennsylvania hospitals, and randomly selected 60 patients at each hospital for inclusion. We reviewed the medical records to gather process measures of quality, pneumonia severity and demographics. We used Medicare administrative data to identify 30-day mortality. Because only a small proportion of the study population was black, we included all 240 black patients and randomly selected 720 white patients matched on age and gender. We performed a resampling of the white patients 10 times.Males were 43% of the cohort, and the median age was 76 years. After controlling for potential confounders, blacks were less likely to receive antibiotics within 8 hours (odds ratio with 95% confidence interval 0.6, 0.4¨C0.97), but were as likely as whites to have blood cultures obtained prior to receiving antibiotics (0.7, 0.3¨C1.5), to have oxygenation assessed within 24 hours of presentation (1.6, 0.9¨C3.0), and to receive guideline concordant antibiotics (OR 0.9, 0.6¨C1.7). Black patients had a trend towards decreased 30-day mortality (0.4, 0.2 to 1.0).Although blacks were less likely to receive optimal care, our findings are consistent with other studies that suggest better risk-adjusted survival among blacks than among whites. Further study is needed to determine why this is the case.Pneumonia (with influenza) is the leading infectious disease cause of death in the United States and the sixth leading cause of death overall [1] According to national mortality data from the CDC blacks suffer disproportionately from this disease, with blacks having a higher incidence of pneumonia and a 1.4 times higher age-adjusted odds of death from pneumonia as compared to non-Hispanic whites [1-4] In contrast several studies of racial variations in short-term mortality have demonstrated that black patients hospitalized with pneumonia are less likely to die in the %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6963/4/20