Background: Black patients have worse in-hospital survival than white patients after in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA), but less is known about long-term outcomes. We sought to assess among IHCA survivors whether there are additional racial differences in survival after hospital discharge and to explore potential reasons for differences. Methods: This was a longitudinal study of patients ≥65 years of age who had an IHCA and survived until hospital discharge between 2000 and 2011 from the national Get With The Guidelines–Resuscitation registry whose data could be linked to Medicare claims data. Sequential hierarchical modified Poisson regression models evaluated the proportion of racial differences explained by patient, hospital, and unmeasu...
BackgroundThe degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary b...
BackgroundSex, race, and insurance status are associated with treatment and outcomes in several card...
Background-—The degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary...
CONTEXT: Racial differences in survival have not been previously studied after in-hospital cardiac a...
Background Following the implementation of the HeartRescue project, with interventions in the commun...
A prospective observational study of 4,653 consecutive cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OOHC...
ObjectivesThis study analyzed HFpEF patient characteristics and clinical outcomes according to race/...
BACKGROUND: Prior studies have suggested that young blacks with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) ma...
Background and Objectives: Complete high-quality data is important to understanding racial differenc...
BACKGROUND: Previous studies of patients undergoing various cardiac surgeries demonstrated worse out...
Importance: Racial disparities in survival after trauma are well described for patients younger than...
This study sought to determine whether the likelihood of receiving primary intensive care unit (ICU)...
Health care disparities associated with African American race may influence event-free survival in p...
Background: The degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary...
AbstractObjectives. This study sought to determine the long-term (>15 years) outcome of a clinically...
BackgroundThe degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary b...
BackgroundSex, race, and insurance status are associated with treatment and outcomes in several card...
Background-—The degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary...
CONTEXT: Racial differences in survival have not been previously studied after in-hospital cardiac a...
Background Following the implementation of the HeartRescue project, with interventions in the commun...
A prospective observational study of 4,653 consecutive cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OOHC...
ObjectivesThis study analyzed HFpEF patient characteristics and clinical outcomes according to race/...
BACKGROUND: Prior studies have suggested that young blacks with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) ma...
Background and Objectives: Complete high-quality data is important to understanding racial differenc...
BACKGROUND: Previous studies of patients undergoing various cardiac surgeries demonstrated worse out...
Importance: Racial disparities in survival after trauma are well described for patients younger than...
This study sought to determine whether the likelihood of receiving primary intensive care unit (ICU)...
Health care disparities associated with African American race may influence event-free survival in p...
Background: The degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary...
AbstractObjectives. This study sought to determine the long-term (>15 years) outcome of a clinically...
BackgroundThe degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary b...
BackgroundSex, race, and insurance status are associated with treatment and outcomes in several card...
Background-—The degree to which outcomes following hospitalization for acute heart failure (HF) vary...