Depression Research and Treatment (Jan 2011)

Ethnicity and Race Variations in Receipt of Surgery among Veterans with and without Depression

  • Laurel A. Copeland,
  • John E. Zeber,
  • Mary Jo Pugh,
  • Karon L. Phillips,
  • Valerie A. Lawrence

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/370962
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2011

Abstract

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To examine equity in one aspect of care provision in the Veterans Health Administration, this study analyzed factors associated with receipt of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), vascular, hip/knee, or digestive system surgeries during FY2006–2009. A random sample of patients (N=317,072) included 9% with depression, 17% African-American patients, 5% Hispanics, and 5% women. In the four-year followup, 18,334 patients (6%) experienced surgery: 3,109 hip/knee, 3,755 digestive, 1,899 CABG, and 11,330 vascular operations. Patients with preexisting depression were less likely to have surgery than nondepressed patients (4% versus 6%). In covariate-adjusted analyses, minority patients were slightly less likely to receive vascular operations compared to white patients (Hispanic OR=0.88, P<.01 ; African-American OR=0.93, P<.01) but more likely to undergo digestive system procedures. Some race-/ethnicity-related disparities of care for cardiovascular disease may persist for veterans using the VHA.