OBJECTIVE: Our goal was to determine whether there are racial differences i
n the severity of illness on admission for premature newborn infants indepe
ndent of gestational age.
STUDY DESIGN: The study population consisted of all African American and Ca
ucasian singleton infants with gestational ages < 34 weeks who were admitte
d to the neonatal intensive care unit at Brigham and Women's Hospital betwe
en December 1994 and November 1995. Illness severity was measured with a ne
onatal severity of illness score, the SNAP score (Score for Neonatal Acute
Physiology). The SNAP score is a physiologic scoring system that ranks the
worst physiologic derangements in each organ system in the first 12 hours o
f life. It is an objective measure of neonatal illness severity with scores
ranging from 0 (healthy) to 42 (most severely ill). Student t tests, chi (
2) analysis, and Fisher exact tests were used to assess statistical signifi
cance. Linear and logistic regression analyses were used to examine associa
tions while confounding factors were controlled for.
RESULTS: There were 129 (79%) Caucasian and 36 (22%) African American newbo
rns included in the analysis. Caucasian newborns had significantly higher m
ean SNAP scores than African American newborns (8.8 vs 6.3; P < .05). Compa
red with African American newborns, Caucasian newborns were more than twice
as likely to have a SNAP score > 10 (33% vs 14%; P < .05). In a linear reg
ression analysis in which we controlled for gestational age, birth weight,
preterm premature rupture of membranes, preterm labor, preeclampsia, intrap
artum fever greater than or equal to 100.4 degreesF, route of delivery, and
other maternal and fetal factors, African American newborns were predicted
to have a SNAP score that was on average 3.0 points lower than that of Cau
casian newborns (P = .005). In a logistic regression in which we controlled
for the above-mentioned confounders, African American newborns were only 1
4% as likely to have a SNAP score > 10 when compared with Caucasian newborn
s (odds ratio, 0.14; 95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.51).
CONCLUSIONS: Over a broad range of prematurity, Caucasian newborns were mor
e ill than African American newborns on admission to the neonatal intensive
care unit.