ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Preventable Hospitalizations for Congestive Heart Failure: Establishing a Baseline to Monitor Trends and Disparities
Race | Visits per 100,000 (95% Confidence Interval) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1995-1996 | 1997-1998 | 1999-2000 | 2001-2002 | 2003-2004 | 2005-2006 | 2007-2009 | |
White | 369.0 (344.8-393.2) | 392.3 (363.8-420.8) | 376.3 (347.3-405.3) | 344.0 (319.0-369.0) | 338.9 (309.5-368.5) | 331.7 (299.3-364.1) | 280.8 (248.9-312.7) |
Black | 775.9 (672.1-879.7) | 797.1 (710.4-883.8) | 834.8 (745.3-924.3) | 753.0 (686.7-819.3) | 689.7 (620.0-759.4) | 715.1 (642.3-787.9) | 723.7 (623.9-823.5) |
Figure. Age- and sex-standardized preventable hospitalization rates for congestive heart failure in the United States across 7 time periods. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. There was a negative linear trend for whites (β = −14/100,000; P = .01) and a borderline decrease for blacks (β = −19/100,000; P = .06). The slopes for blacks and whites were not significantly different from each other. Source: National Hospital Discharge Survey, 1995-2009.
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