Health

Black and Hispanic People More Likely to Die After Surgery

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A new analysis of more than 1.5 million inpatient hospital procedures in the United States has revealed that Black and Hispanic patients die at a substantially higher rate after surgery than white patients.

According to the findings, presented this week at the annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists in San Francisco, the likelihood of death within 30 days after surgery is 42 percent higher for Black people and 21 percent higher for Hispanic people.

Researchers estimated that about 12,000 minority patients who died after surgery over the past two decades may have lived if there were no racial and ethnic disparities among Americans having surgery.

“Although we saw post-surgery mortality decline for all groups, people are still dying every day because of persistent disparities in surgical health in the United States, and if we do not intensify efforts to reduce this disparity, people are going to continue to die,” says the lead study author, Christian Mpody, MD, an assistant professor of anesthesiology and pediatrics at the Ohio State University College of Medicine in Columbus.

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