Lowe Robert A, Localio A Russell, Schwarz Donald F, Williams Sankey, Tuton Lucy Wolf, Maroney Staci, Nicklin David, Goldfarb Neil, Vojta Deneen D, Feldman Harold I
Center for Policy and Research in Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon 97239, USA.
Med Care. 2005 Aug;43(8):792-800. doi: 10.1097/01.mlr.0000170413.60054.54.
Many patients use emergency departments (EDs) for primary care. Previous studies have found that patient characteristics affect ED utilization. However, such studies have led to few policy changes.
We sought to determine whether Medicaid patients' ED use is associated with characteristics of their primary care practices.
This was a cohort study.
A total of 57,850 patients, assigned to 353 primary care practices affiliated with a Medicaid HMO, were included.
Predictor variables were characteristics of primary care practices, which were measured by visiting each practice. The outcome variable was ED use adjusted for patient characteristics.
On average, patients made 0.80 ED visits/person/yr. Patients from practices with more than 12 evening hours/wk used the ED 20% less than patients from practices without evening hours. A higher ratio of the number of active patients per clinician-hour of practice time was associated with more ED use. When more Medicaid patients were in a practice, these patients used the ED more frequently. Other factors associated with ED use included equipment for the care of asthma and presence of nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
Modifiable characteristics of primary care practices were associated with ED use. Because the observational design of this study does not allow definitive conclusions about causality, future studies should include intervention trials to determine whether changing practice characteristics can reduce ED use.
Improving primary care access and scope of services may reduce ED use. Focusing on systems issues rather than patient characteristics may be a more productive strategy to improve appropriate use of emergency medical care.
许多患者将急诊科用于初级保健。先前的研究发现患者特征会影响急诊科的使用。然而,此类研究几乎未带来政策变化。
我们试图确定医疗补助患者的急诊科使用情况是否与其初级保健机构的特征相关。
这是一项队列研究。
共纳入了57,850名患者,他们被分配到隶属于一家医疗补助健康维护组织的353家初级保健机构。
预测变量为初级保健机构的特征,通过走访每家机构来进行测量。结果变量为经患者特征调整后的急诊科使用情况。
平均而言,患者每人每年进行0.80次急诊科就诊。每周晚间工作时长超过12小时的机构的患者比没有晚间工作时间的机构的患者少使用20%的急诊科服务。每位临床医生每工作小时的活跃患者数量比例越高,急诊科使用就越多。当一家机构中有更多医疗补助患者时,这些患者更频繁地使用急诊科。与急诊科使用相关联的其他因素包括哮喘护理设备以及执业护士和医师助理的存在。
初级保健机构的可改变特征与急诊科使用相关。由于本研究的观察性设计不允许对因果关系得出确定性结论,未来的研究应包括干预试验,以确定改变机构特征是否能够减少急诊科使用。
改善初级保健的可及性和服务范围可能会减少急诊科使用。关注系统问题而非患者特征可能是提高紧急医疗护理合理使用的更有效策略。