Racial and ethnic differences in health and health care: lessons from an inner-city patient population actively using heroin and cocaine
- PMID: 16635973
- DOI: 10.1300/J233v05n02_03
Racial and ethnic differences in health and health care: lessons from an inner-city patient population actively using heroin and cocaine
Abstract
This study describes differences in health care utilization and recorded diagnoses in a racially and ethnically diverse sample of 1175 out-of-treatment patients who screened positive for heroin and cocaine use during an outpatient visit to a drop-in clinic at an urban hospital. Blacks averaged more ED visits than Whites and higher average yearly ED charges than Hispanics (1,991 dollars vs. 1,603 dollars). Charges over two years totaled 6,111,660 dollars. Blacks were most likely to be diagnosed with injury, hypertension, cardiac disease, alcohol abuse/dependency, and sexually transmitted disease, and least likely to be diagnosed with psychiatric disease. Hispanics were most likely to be diagnosed with HIV, dental disease and drug overdoses, and least likely to be injured. Only 34% of this group of drug users was identified with a diagnosis of drug abuse or dependency.
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