Racial and Ethnic Discrepancy in Pulse Oximetry and Delayed Identification of Treatment Eligibility Among Patients With COVID-19
Johns Hopkins Medicine · Johns Hopkins University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Pulse oximetry guides triage and therapy decisions for COVID-19. Whether reported racial inaccuracies in oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry are present in patients with COVID-19 and associated with treatment decisions is unknown.
To determine whether there is differential inaccuracy of pulse oximetry by race or ethnicity among patients with COVID-19 and estimate the association of such inaccuracies with time to recognition of eligibility for oxygen threshold-specific COVID-19 therapies. Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective cohort study of clinical data from 5 referral centers and community hospitals in the Johns Hopkins Health System included patients with COVID-19 who self-identified as Asian, Black, Hispanic, or White. Exposures: Concurrent measurements (within 10 minutes) of oxygen saturation levels in arterial blood (SaO2) and by pulse oximetry (SpO2). Main Outcomes and Measures: For patients with concurrent SpO2 and SaO2 measurements, the proportion with occult hypoxemia (SaO2
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.20
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
9- AFAshraf FawzyCorresponding
Johns Hopkins Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
- TDTianshi David Wu
Center for Innovation, Baylor College of Medicine, Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center
- KWKunbo Wang
Johns Hopkins University
- MLMatthew L. Robinson
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
- JFJad Farha
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Pulse oximetry
- Oxygen therapy
- Oxygen saturation
- Hypoxemia
- Internal medicine
- Anesthesia
- Oxygen