| 27 Septembre 2013
Research  has shown that minority groups tend to develop complications following  surgery more often than whites. Investigators at the  University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing explored the impact of  patient characteristics, including race, ethnicity and sex. They also  examined the  occurrence of postoperative complications among older adults using  patient discharge data; results from the American Hospital Association's  Annual Survey;  and the 2010 U.S. Census.  Investigators also examined 13 frequent  complications among 587,314 white, black, and Hispanic patients 65 years  and older who  underwent general, orthopedic, or vascular surgery in 600 hospitals.  Investigators  discovered that black and Hispanic patients have a greater chance than  white patients of developing a vast majority of  postoperative complications. In fact, black patients were nearly three  times more likely than white patients to develop 12 of the 13  complications identified  by researchers. Hispanic patients were twice as likely than white  patients to develop nine of the 13 complications but less likely than  white patients to  develop two of the complications. When hospital and patient  characteristics were taken into account, the number of complications  experienced more by black  and Hispanic patients significantly dropped.  "The  risk of developing a post operative complication may be attributed to a  number of factors. Most pronounced, however, was the effect of  pre-existing medical conditions," said lead author Dr. J. Margo Brooks  Carthon.  The  investigators also found differences between blacks, Hispanics, and  whites that persisted after accounting for hospital and patient  characteristics were different for male and female patients. "Older  black and Hispanic patients admitted to hospitals for common surgeries  have a  disproportionately higher risk of developing complications. The risk of  developing certain post-surgical complications, however, differs for men  and women—  even men and women of the same ethnic and racial backgrounds," explained  Dr. Brooks Carthon.  The  findings demonstrate the need to improve surgical safety and quality,  particularly for older minority patients who are often sicker going  into surgery and thereby at greater risk for complications. "Our study  also suggests the need for further evaluation of patient risk factors  prior to surgery  and more vigilant surveillance of patients following operative  procedures," said Dr. Brooks Carthon. 
Older  black and Hispanic patients have a greater risk than white patients of  developing complications following surgery, a difference that  can be explained by a patients' gender and pre-existing medical  conditions. These findings, which are published today in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS), indicate that efforts  to carefully evaluate risk factors prior to surgery need more attention, particularly for older minority patients.