Kim Theresa W, Kertesz Stefan G, Horton Nicholas J, Tibbetts Nicole, Samet Jeffrey H
Clinical Addiction Research and Education (CARE) Unit, Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2006 Feb 27;6:19. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-19.
Because individuals with HIV/AIDS often have complex medical and social needs, the impact of housing status on medical service utilization is difficult to isolate from the impact of conditions that may worsen during periods of homelessness such as depression and substance abuse. We examine whether episodes of homelessness are independently associated with suboptimal medical utilization even when accounting for concurrent addiction severity and depression.
We used data from a 30-month cohort of patients with HIV/AIDS and alcohol problems. Housing status, utilization (ambulatory visits, emergency department (ED) visits, and hospitalizations) and other features were assessed with standardized research interviews at 6-month intervals. Multivariable longitudinal regression models calculated incidence rate ratios (IRR) comparing utilization rates during 6-month intervals (homeless versus housed). Additional models assessed whether addiction severity and depressive symptoms could account for utilization differences.
Of the 349 subjects, 139 (39%) reported homelessness at least once during the study period; among these subjects, the median number of nights homeless per 6-month interview period was 30. Homelessness was associated with higher ED utilization (IRR = 2.17; 95% CI = 1.72-2.74) and hospitalizations (IRR = 2.30; 1.70-3.12), despite no difference in ambulatory care utilization (IRR = 1.09; 0.89-1.33). These associations were attenuated but remained significant when adjusting for addiction severity and depressive symptoms.
In patients with HIV/AIDS and alcohol problems, efforts to improve housing stability may help to mitigate intensive medical utilization patterns.
由于艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者通常有复杂的医疗和社会需求,住房状况对医疗服务利用的影响很难与无家可归期间可能恶化的状况(如抑郁和药物滥用)的影响区分开来。我们研究了即使考虑到同时存在的成瘾严重程度和抑郁,无家可归事件是否与医疗利用不足独立相关。
我们使用了来自一个为期30个月的艾滋病毒/艾滋病和酒精问题患者队列的数据。通过每6个月进行一次的标准化研究访谈来评估住房状况、医疗服务利用情况(门诊就诊、急诊就诊和住院)以及其他特征。多变量纵向回归模型计算发病率比(IRR),以比较6个月期间(无家可归与有住房)的利用率。其他模型评估成瘾严重程度和抑郁症状是否可以解释利用率差异。
在349名受试者中,139名(39%)在研究期间至少报告过一次无家可归;在这些受试者中,每6个月访谈期间无家可归的夜晚数中位数为30个。无家可归与更高的急诊利用率(IRR = 2.17;95% CI = 1.72 - 2.74)和住院率(IRR = 2.30;1.70 - 3.12)相关,尽管门诊医疗利用率没有差异(IRR = 1.09;0.89 - 1.33)。在调整成瘾严重程度和抑郁症状后,这些关联减弱但仍然显著。
在患有艾滋病毒/艾滋病和酒精问题的患者中,努力改善住房稳定性可能有助于减轻密集的医疗利用模式。