A long-term study of Medicare patients finds that Black patients who have an ischemic stroke (blocked blood flow to the brain) die at a higher rate than white patients, even after accounting for preexisting health conditions, a preliminary study by researchers at the Yale School of Public Health finds.
The findings are being presented at the American Stroke Association’s virtual International Stroke Conference 2021 on March 17-19.
Researchers analyzed data on 744,044 Medicare beneficiaries (ages 65 and older) who had been treated at U.S. hospitals for ischemic stroke between 2005 and 2007. Overall, 85.6% were white, 9.9% were Black and 4.5% were of other races or ethnic groups.
Patient records were analyzed over a 10-year period, and the analysis found:
Overall, the death rate was about 75%. Black patients had the highest death rate at 76.4%, followed by whites at 75.4%; and the death rate for those of other races or other ethnic groups was 70.3%.
Even after adjusting for differences in preexisting health problems, the risk of death within 10 years after stroke was about 4% higher for Black patients than white patients. However, the stroke death risk was about 8% lower for those of other races.