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Medicine Software United States Technology

Researchers Find Racial Bias In Hospital Algorithm (wsj.com) 114

Black patients were less likely than white patients to get extra medical help, despite being sicker, when an algorithm used by a large hospital chose who got the additional attention, according to a new study underscoring the risks as technology gains a foothold in medicine. The Wall Street Journal reports: Hospitals use the algorithm -- from Optum, UnitedHealth Group's health-services arm -- to find patients with diabetes, heart disease and other chronic ailments who could benefit from having health-care workers monitor their overall health, manage their prescriptions and juggle doctor visits, according to the study published Thursday in the journal Science. Yet the algorithm gave healthier white patients the same ranking as black patients who had one more chronic illness as well as poorer laboratory results and vital signs. The reason? The algorithm used cost to rank patients, and researchers found health-care spending for black patients was less than for white patients with similar medical conditions.

For the study, data-science researchers looked at the assessments made by one hospital's use of the algorithm. The study didn't name the hospital. The researchers focused on the algorithm's rankings of 6,079 patients who identified themselves as black in the hospital's records, and 43,539 who identified as white and didn't identify themselves as any other race or ethnicity. Then the researchers assessed the health needs of the same set of patients using their medical records, laboratory results and vital signs, and developed a different algorithm. Using that data, the researchers found that black patients were sicker than white patients who had a similar predicted cost. Among those rated the highest priority by the hospital's algorithm, black patients had 4.8 chronic diseases compared with 3.8 of the conditions among white patients. The researchers found the number of black patients eligible for fast-track enrollment in the program more than doubled by prioritizing patients based on their number of chronic conditions, rather than ranking them based on cost.

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Researchers Find Racial Bias In Hospital Algorithm

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  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Thursday October 24, 2019 @08:37PM (#59344726) Journal
    That's the only question I find relevant here: does this 'algorithm' they're using actually look at whether the patient being evaluated is black or white, or not? If it does then I'd like to hear the reason why.
    • How could it not? Skin color is one of the simplest factors to measure.

      • True, but does the algorithm "know" about the skin color of the patient? Just because some variable is known doesn't mean it show up in the algorithm.

    • by s4080326 ( 5462622 ) on Thursday October 24, 2019 @09:06PM (#59344822)
      They found that the algorithm decided that people that are spending lots of money on healthcare already should be sold even more healthcare. What they found was that white people on average are more wealthy than black people and hospitals care more about wealth than health.
      • Researched searched for something to complain about and found it)) If you look more broadly, I think that African Americans have better health, so they go to the clinic less often. There are a large number of clinics in large cities that don't impose additional services. I live and work in NY now and I can give an example of this option - https://walk-in-clinic-ny.com/ [walk-in-clinic-ny.com] These researchers wouldn't have a chance if they conducted their tests in a similar clinic.
        • by pyrrho ( 167252 )

          If you want to "think" something, you can also look up the facts about if "African Americans" have better health, e.g. through mortality rates. People actually measure number from the real world!

          • ...and its not freaking close. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/previ... [cdc.gov]

      • That doesn't answer the very specific question I asked.
        • It does. White people spend more money on medication and medical treatment, and the hospital algo prefers people who are more likely to spend money on something they can sell. In other words, no, they did not directly select for skin color, they selected for a trait that is indirectly linked to skin color.

          • Well then they're right: their 'algorithm' is bullshit and needs to be fixed.
            'Healthcare' needs to be about taking care of people's health, not about 'how much money can we make', leading to 'black people are poor, screw them, they're on their own'.
            • Yes, it should be. But if you make healthcare a for-profit business, don't be surprised if it acts like a for-profit business.

      • The program reduces costs for patients by providing a little extra attention up front. The whole idea is to reduce patient costs, and thus hospital revenue.

        The algorithm uses spending as a proxy for need, and since black patients tend to consume fewer medical resources than they need, their actual costs are lower than they should be and the algorithm overlooks them.

    • I'm not sure of the word that describes crude and production code (archaic maybe), but all of this will be fixed when they just scan facial symmetry and not base the decision on cost or race. Its a pretty good data point.
    • by Psychotria ( 953670 ) on Thursday October 24, 2019 @10:03PM (#59344956)

      I'm not sure the algorithm in question takes skin colour into account, but it apparently does not take race into account. From the paper (https://science.sciencemag.org/content/366/6464/447)

      Notably, the algorithm specifically excludes race.

      • If it doesn't specifically consider whether someone is black or white then at least it's not intentionally racist, just incidentally racist, the difference being (potentially, at least) intent.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The point they are trying to make is that even when they tried to exclude race from the algorithm some proxy for race was just found anyway.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      "The algorithm used cost to rank patients"... so if a person cant pay as much... guess what happens to extra services that cost more money?
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday October 25, 2019 @03:16AM (#59345426) Homepage Journal

      TFA already answers that, and the answer is no.

      The issue, as TFA explains, is that the algorithm is prioritizing based on who has the most money rather than who has the greatest medical need. A non-white person might need treatment more urgently and benefit more from an early appointment, and a human would hopefully take that into account and put them at the front of the queue, but the algorithm puts the white person first because they have more money available.

      You may think that's fine, and you can certainly make the argument that healthcare should be prioritized based on wealth if you like, but we should at least have that debate rather than pretending that medical need is the primary factor in decision making.

      • by d1sec ( 6339258 )
        It seem like if there is bias, it's income or wealth bias. If they compared only black people, would the wealthier black people get better treatment than the black people with lower income? Did they compare results for white and black people in the same income category?
    • From what I can tell, only the study looked at race. The algorithm used current and predicted costs as a proxy for medical need, and ran into problems because black patients tend to use fewer medical resources than they may need. So, it could be that the assumption that people consume medical resources until their medical needs are met is really where the fault lays (lies?).
  • The researchers focused on the algorithm's rankings of 6,079 patients who identified themselves as black in the hospital's records

    Can we see this Optum algorithm and make our own minds up, seeing as it specifically excluded race [washingtonpost.com].
    • Can we see this Optum algorithm

      No, you can't. And you can't even access it unless unless you pay them lots of money.

      and make our own minds up

      You're going to have to be a big boy and reach conclusions based on what you have not some hypothetica.

      seeing as it specifically excluded race.

      It's amazing how slashdotters who work with buggy software all day every day and who are rightly happy to rag on companies for crappy software practices and poor managements suddenly do a massive about face when on of those mig

  • Will always consider cost first.

  • Yup, because cost should be at the heart of any algorithm intended to identify at-risk patients and improve healthcare delivery....

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Its at the heart of every nations healthcare delivery systems.
      Gov buys from a limited list of approved medicines at a very low cost. Want new medicine that is not yet approved? That new medicine does not exist in that nation.
      It might get approved in 20 years depending on cost?
      Get sick and hope the medicine is covered by that gov that year.
      Surgery? Hope the condition can wait for the months and years to see the needed experts.
      A private hospital offers new options to more people who can pay. Options
      • No, it’s not at the heart of all healthcare systems, and it certainly has absolutely NO place in any algorithm intended to identify patients that can be supported better - the cost decisions in, say, the British NHS happen after that point. Why? Because of things like this. Patient needs are identified and if a particular drug or service is on the restricted list due to cost, then it goes to panel *after* the individual patient need is identified, not as part of the identification process.

        • > No, it’s not at the heart of all healthcare systems, and it certainly has absolutely NO place in any algorithm intended to identify patients that can be supported better

          The funds are not infinite. Efficiency, and effectiveness, has to count somewhat. Pre-natal care and vaccines, for example, are vastly more _efficient_ than months of natal ICU care and plagues, and the funds for them are sometimes drained by a very few cases. Brushing teeth is much less expensive than root canal. So treatments ar

      • And even that is better than what you see at places like Walter Reed
    • Any GP would have told you this. Insurance companies KNOW postcode and public transport availability are good predictors, and besides by postcode is less racially biased - black or white trailer trash they don't care. They probably don't get the ability to price on weight and body mass, but they can buy fitness tracker and gym membership data to sweeten better risks. Then do a JOIN on public housing/council estates and higher crime areas and the age of the car you own, and value of property/ bank balances.
    • If it's always the taxpayers paying for everything, then the decisions get made by policy and people have little say in their own outcomes.

      If you want to pay extra for some kind of treatment, you are looked at as stomping on someone else's civil rights.
  • A cynical person might wonder if the algorithm was set up that way to ensure the more profitable patients were seen first. If group A generates similar income (my income, your costs) to B, but for four maladies instead of three, then group B is more profitable. After all, that's one less battery of tests to run, one round less paperwork, etc.
    • Hopefully a cynical person will read it through and see that the program exists to reduce overall costs by providing patients some inexpensive help in managing care. So, hospitals make less money off of each patient in the program.

      Interestingly, since black patients are consuming less healthcare than they may need (hence the disparity), putting them in the program may result in them consuming more healthcare. It's hard to say what the average impact of that would be on patient spending and the hospital

  • Whenever your skin turns black from gangrene they want to cut it out. Those racists!

  • The word seems to be a new to be a new pop culture thing. Why not say program/?
  • I completely sure that the algorithm don't have explicit rules against race. Not even rules designed to do something againt a race hidden but created intentionaly.

    Here what we have is data correlation. People from different races has different traits,different start conditions, etc. which means that it will be have different results in total numbers.

    That's not "racial bias" but different results based on the apllied rules.

    Talking about "bias" is a very bad approach to address the problems because imply some

  • I went and read the paper. While it looks sound, I don't understand the specific criteria of black vs whites. " Our primary interest was in studying the differences between White and Black patients. We formed race categories by using hospital records, which are based on patient self-reporting. Any patient who identified as Black was considered to be Black for the purpose of this analysis. Of the remaining patients, those who self-identified as races other than White (e.g., Hispanic) were so considered (data
    • It would be worth knowing, but I don't think the financial data is available. Hospitals don't ask how much money you make.
  • ... a hospital that used a program to maximize money from customers, tended to select customers who had more money? Shocking.
    • Except that it's a program to minimize money from customers. If a patient has high blood pressure, the hospital will provide help managing it so that the patient doesn't need to come back with a heart attack. Making sure a patient keeps regular appointments and takes their meds is less expensive than surgery.
  • A bias on class and wealth is not related to race. I'm sure there are many wealthy black people who are preferred along with "the whites". The bias appears to be with financial class, and not race at all. In fact, Asians and Middle-Eastern descendants rank right there with white people. So why single white people out? So, a business prefers people with money. Wow, big surprise.

    The author is clearly a racist, and this article is what you get when a racist continues to look at everything as a "race" problem.

  • Algorithms are based on logic. The problem with trying to apply them to our healthcare system is that at best you will get a sliver of understanding of a larger system that nobody understands fully. I have worked at a couple of big healthcare companies in my career, specifically for hospitals, and it is extremely complex. Cost accounting in hospitals is a labyrinth, and that just addresses one of the problems. There are many more, and I highly doubt there is anyone who really understands it all holistic

  • United Health isn't in business to improve health, they are in business to make money. Their algorithms are optimized to maximize ROI. If they believe that they get better returns from health care for a certain type of person, they will bake that into the algorithm.

    Being as the ACA very nearly gave them license to print money, it should be no surprise that they would pull something like this to increase their own payout. They knew they wouldn't have any real consequences to face; they'll say "oops!"
  • Really all they've proven is that if you have more money you get better care. Who knew?
  • Despite this analysis being confusing as hell, I'll bet that you get the same results if you divide the patients by socioeconomic status. Most of the problems that black people face are due to poverty, not being black.
  • Anything that correlates with being black is now racist.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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