Alter H J, Braun R, Zazzali J L
Alameda County Medical Center, Oakland, CA, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 1999 Jul;6(7):736-43. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.1999.tb00445.x.
To explore whether patients in a public ED had poorer health than patients in a private ED, the authors compared the physical and mental health statuses of patients seeking emergency care.
A cross-sectional observational study of all adult patients, regardless of acuity, seen during two 24-hour periods in spring 1997 in an urban county trauma center (68,000 annual visits) and a private community ED (35,000 annual visits). Scores on the Physical Component Summary (PCS) and the Mental Component Summary (MCS) scales of the Medical Outcomes Study 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12) were compared between sites, with published national norms, and with hospital admission.
Of 571 eligible patients, 392 (69%) completed the SF-12. Patients in the public ED had a mean PCS score of 40.1, compared with 43.7 for patients in the private ED, for a difference of 3.6 points (p < 0.01; 95% CI = 0.9 to 6.1). After controlling for age, sex, ethnicity, triage acuity, ambulance arrival, and insurance status, this difference increased to 3.9 points (p = 0.02; 95% CI = 0.7 to 7.0). The mean MCS score among public ED patients was 44.1, compared with 46.5 in the private ED population, for a difference of 2.4 (p = 0.08; 95% CI = -0.3 to 5.0); after adjustment this difference increased to 2.5 (p = 0.15; 95% CI = -0.9 to 5.8), but remained statistically not significant. While all scores were significantly lower than national norms (mean PCS 50.1, mean MCS 50.0), patients in the public ED scored consistently lowest. PCS score was significantly inversely correlated with admission, with each point decrease in PCS score increasing the odds of admission by 0.05 (95% CI = 0.01 to 0.08), and conferring an odds ratio of 5.1 (95% CI = 1.2 to 21.1) for admission among the 25th percentile for PCS scores.
Patients seeking care in the public ED had lower adjusted physical health status scores than comparable patients obtaining care in a private ED. The SF-12 is sufficiently responsive to detect hypothesized differences between ED populations, and correlates well with admission decisions.
为探究公立急诊科患者的健康状况是否比私立急诊科患者更差,作者比较了寻求急诊治疗患者的身心健康状况。
对1997年春季两个24小时时间段内在一家城市县创伤中心(年就诊量68,000人次)和一家私立社区急诊科(年就诊量35,000人次)就诊的所有成年患者(无论病情严重程度)进行横断面观察性研究。比较了两个地点在医学结局研究12项简短健康调查(SF - 12)的身体成分总结(PCS)和心理成分总结(MCS)量表上的得分,并与已公布的全国标准以及住院情况进行了比较。
在571名符合条件的患者中,392名(69%)完成了SF - 12调查。公立急诊科患者的PCS平均得分为40.1分,而私立急诊科患者为43.7分,相差3.6分(p < 0.01;95%置信区间 = 0.9至6.1)。在控制了年龄、性别、种族、分诊 acuity、救护车到达情况和保险状况后,这一差异增加到3.9分(p = 0.02;95%置信区间 = 0.7至7.0)。公立急诊科患者的MCS平均得分为44.1分,私立急诊科患者为46.5分,相差2.4分(p = 0.08;95%置信区间 = -0.3至5.0);调整后这一差异增加到2.5分(p = 0.15;95%置信区间 = -0.9至5.8),但在统计学上仍不显著。虽然所有得分均显著低于全国标准(PCS平均分为50.1,MCS平均分为50.0),但公立急诊科患者的得分始终最低。PCS得分与住院情况显著负相关,PCS得分每降低1分,住院几率增加0.05(95%置信区间 = 0.01至0.08),并且在PCS得分处于第25百分位数的患者中,住院几率比为5.1(95%置信区间 = 1.2至21.1)。
在公立急诊科寻求治疗的患者经调整后的身体健康状况得分低于在私立急诊科接受治疗的类似患者。SF - 12足以灵敏地检测急诊科人群之间的假设差异,并且与住院决策相关性良好。