Health Affairs July 1, 2024
Renee Y. Hsia, Yu-Chu Shen

Abstract

Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a procedure that opens blocked arteries and restores blood flow to the heart. Timely access to hospitals offering PCI services can be a matter of life or death for patients experiencing a heart attack; however, hospitals’ adoption of PCI services may vary between communities, posing potential barriers to critical care. Our cohort study of US general acute hospitals during the period 2000–20 examined PCI service adoption across communities stratified by race, ethnicity, income, and rurality and further classified as segregated or integrated. Of 5,260 hospitals, 1,621 offered PCI services in 2020 or before, 630 added PCI services between 2001 and...

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