Rust George, Baltrus Peter, Ye Jiali, Daniels Elvan, Quarshie Alexander, Boumbulian Paul, Strothers Harry
National Center for Primary Care, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30310, USA.
J Rural Health. 2009 Winter;25(1):8-16. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2009.00193.x.
Community health centers (CHCs) provide essential access to a primary care medical home for the uninsured, especially in rural communities with no other primary care safety net. CHCs could potentially reduce uninsured emergency department (ED) visits in rural communities.
We compared uninsured ED visit rates between rural counties in Georgia that have a CHC clinic site and counties without a CHC presence.
We analyzed data from 100% of ED visits occurring in 117 rural (non-metropolitan statistical area [MSA]) counties in Georgia from 2003 to 2005. The counties were classified as having a CHC presence if a federally funded (Section 330) CHC had a primary care delivery site in that county throughout the study period. The main outcome measure was uninsured ED visit rates among the uninsured (all-cause ED visits and visits for ambulatory care sensitive conditions). Poisson regression models were used to examine the relationship between ED rates and the presence of a CHC. To ensure that the effects were unique to the uninsured population, we ran similar analyses on insured ED visits.
Counties without a CHC primary care clinic site had 33% higher rates of uninsured all-cause ED visits per 10,000 uninsured population compared with non-CHC counties (rate ratio [RR] 1.33, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.11-1.59). Higher ED visit rates remained significant (RR 1.21, 95% CI 1.02-1.42) after adjustment for percentage of population below poverty level, percentage of black population, and number of hospitals. Uninsured ED visit rates were also higher for various categories of diagnoses, but remained statistically significant on multivariate analysis only for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (adjusted RR = 1.22, 95% CI 1.01-1.47). No such relationship was found for ED visit rates of insured patients (RR 1.06, 95% CI 0.92-1.22).
The absence of a CHC is associated with a substantial excess in uninsured ED visits in rural counties, an excess not seen for ED visit rates among the insured.
社区卫生中心(CHC)为未参保者提供了获得初级保健医疗之家的重要途径,尤其是在没有其他初级保健安全网的农村社区。社区卫生中心有可能减少农村社区未参保者的急诊就诊率。
我们比较了佐治亚州设有社区卫生中心诊所的农村县和没有社区卫生中心的农村县之间未参保者的急诊就诊率。
我们分析了2003年至2005年佐治亚州117个农村(非大都市统计区[MSA])县100%的急诊就诊数据。如果在整个研究期间,联邦资助(第330节)的社区卫生中心在该县设有初级保健服务点,则该县被归类为设有社区卫生中心。主要结局指标是未参保者的未参保急诊就诊率(全因急诊就诊率和非卧床护理敏感疾病就诊率)。采用泊松回归模型来检验急诊就诊率与社区卫生中心存在之间的关系。为确保这些影响是未参保人群所特有的,我们对参保者的急诊就诊情况进行了类似分析。
与没有社区卫生中心的县相比,没有社区卫生中心初级保健诊所的县每10000名未参保人群中未参保全因急诊就诊率高出33%(率比[RR]1.33,95%置信区间[CI]1.11-1.59)。在对贫困水平以下人口百分比、黑人人口百分比和医院数量进行调整后,较高的急诊就诊率仍然显著(RR 1.21,95% CI 1.02-1.42)。各类诊断的未参保急诊就诊率也较高,但在多变量分析中,仅非卧床护理敏感疾病的就诊率在统计学上仍显著(调整后RR = 1.22,95% CI 1.01-1.47)。在参保患者的急诊就诊率方面未发现这种关系(RR 1.06,95% CI 0.92-1.22)。
农村县没有社区卫生中心与未参保者急诊就诊率大幅增加有关,而参保者的急诊就诊率未出现这种增加情况。