Patient Care Access News

Women, Black Patients See Longer Emergency Department Wait Times

A new study found that emergency department wait times were significantly longer for women and Black patients.

The report highlighted how race and gender play a role in patient care access.

Source: Getty Images

By Sarai Rodriguez

- Women and Black patients with chest pain experienced longer emergency department wait times than their White, male counterparts, new data shows, shining a light on disparities in timely patient access to care.

These disparities are particularly troubling as chest pain is the most frequent symptom of heart attack for both men and women of all ages. Further, chest pain accounts for over 6.5 million emergency department (ED) visits annually in the United States. When someone has a heart attack, every minute counts, Harmony R. Reynolds, senior author of the study stated.

To conduct the study, researchers examined national survey data of more than 4,000 patients representing over 29 million ED visits for chest pain by adults age 55 and younger between 2014 and 2018.