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Original Contribution
JAMA. 1993;269(13):1661-1666. doi: 10.1001/jama.1993.03500130075035

Use of Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery in the United States and Canada

Influence of Age and Income

  1. Geoffrey M. Anderson, MD, PhD;
  2. Kevin Grumbach, MD;
  3. Harold S. Luft, PhD;
  4. Leslie L. Roos, PhD;
  5. Cameron Mustard, PhD;
  6. Robert Brook, MD, ScD
  1. From the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences and University of Toronto (Ontario) (Dr Anderson); the Department of Family and Community Medicine (Dr Grumbach); the Institute for Health Policy Studies, (Drs Grumbach and Luft), University of California, San Francisco; the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada (Drs Roos and Mustard); and the UCLA/RAND Center for Health Policy Studies, Santa Monica, Calif (Dr Brook).

Abstract

Objective. —To compare overall rates of coronary artery bypass surgery (CABS) in several Canadian and US jurisdictions and to compare use by age and income groups in the two countries.

Design. —Survey, using computerized hospital discharge abstracts.

Setting. —All nonfederal hospitals in New York, California, Ontario, Manitoba, and British Columbia between 1983 and 1989.

Patients. —All adult residents of the five jurisdictions who underwent CABS in a hospital in their jurisdiction.

Results. —Between 1983 and 1989, the CABS rates were consistently highest in California and lowest in the Canadian jurisdictions. In 1989, the age-adjusted rate of CABS in California (112.5/100 000 adults) was 27% higher than in New York (88.4/100 000) and 80% higher than in the three Canadian provinces combined (62.4/100 000). The CABS rates increased for those aged 65 years and older and decreased for those aged 20 to 54 years in all five jurisdictions. In 1989, CABS rates were three times higher in California than in Canada for those aged 75 years and older, and the higher rates for those aged 65 years and older accounted for 75% of the overall difference in rates between California and Canada. In Canada, CABS rates for the nonelderly varied little by income of area of residence, but in New York and California, rates increased steadily with the income of area of residence.

Conclusion. —Control over the supply of resources in Canada is associated with markedly lower CABS rates for the elderly than found in the United States. While overall rates are lower in Canada, the Canadian universal health insurance system reduces the influence of income on access to CABS found in the United States. However, even without universal health insurance, CABS rates for the nonelderly living in the poorest areas in California are similar to the rates for those living in the poorest parts of Canada.

(JAMA. 1993;269:1661-1666)

Footnotes

  • Reprint requests to the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Room 231, Sunnybrook Health Science Centre, 2075 Bayview Ave, North York, Ontario, Canada M4N 3M5 (Dr Anderson).

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