Abstract

The purpose of this study is to identify the impact of demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical factors on congenital heart surgery outcomes. This retrospective cohort study included 234 congenital heart surgery patients from 2011 through 2015, in a racially/ethnically diverse metropolitan children's hospital. Outcomes included length of stay (LOS), age at first echocardiogram, length of mechanical ventilation, and incidence of complications. Compared to others, black children underwent their first echocardiogram at a later age (median 23 versus 2days, p=0.014) and were more likely to be diagnosed with congenital heart disease in the emergency room (p=0.026). Hispanic children were more likely to have major non-cardiac congenital anomalies (p=0.045). Increased LOS during elective admissions was associated with higher surgical complexity (STAT category 4 and 5 Estimate 3.905days, p=0.001), compared to STAT category 1, and number of complications (Estimate=2.306days per complication, p<0.001). Increased LOS in non-elective admissions was associated with the number of complex chronic conditions (Estimate=15.446days, p=0.045) and the number of complications (Estimate=11.591days per complication, p<0.001). However, in multivariate analysis, race and ethnicity was not associated with increased LOS or age at first echocardiogram. In this diverse setting, race/ethnicity was not associated with increased LOS, age at first echocardiogram, length of ventilation, or complications. Surgical complexity, chronic conditions, and complications were associated with increased LOS. We discuss some interventions to reduce disparities in congenital heart surgery outcomes.

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