Ludwick Annameika, Fu Rongwei, Warden Craig, Lowe Robert A
Department of Emergency Medicin, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2009 May;16(5):411-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2009.00395.x. Epub 2009 Apr 10.
Patients of all ages use emergency departments (EDs) for primary care. Several studies have evaluated patient and system characteristics that influence pediatric ED use. However, the issue of proximity as a predictor of ED use has not been well studied. The authors sought to determine whether ED use by pediatric Medicaid enrollees was associated with the distance to their primary care providers (PCPs), distance to the nearest ED, and distance to the nearest children's hospital.
This historical cohort study included 26,038 children age 18 and under, assigned to 332 primary care practices affiliated with a Medicaid health maintenance organization (HMO). Predictor variables were distance from the child's home to his or her PCP site, distance from home to the nearest ED, and distance from home to the nearest children's hospital. The outcome variable was each child's ED use. A negative binomial model was used to determine the association between distance variables and ED use, adjusted for age, sex, and race, plus medical and primary care site characteristics previously found to influence ED use. Distance variables were divided into quartiles to test for nonlinear associations.
On average, children made 0.31 ED visits/person/year. In the multivariable model, children living greater than 1.19 miles from the nearest ED had 11% lower ED use than those living within 0.5 miles of the nearest ED (risk ratio [RR] = 0.89, 95% CI = 0.81 to 0.99). Children living between 1.54 and 3.13 miles from their PCPs had 13% greater ED use (RR = 1.13, 95% CI = 1.03 to 1.24) than those who lived within 0.7 miles of their PCP.
Geographical variables play a significant role in ED utilization in children, confirming the importance of system-level determinants of ED use and creating the opportunity for interventions to reduce geographical barriers to primary care.
各年龄段的患者都会利用急诊科进行初级保健。多项研究评估了影响儿科急诊就诊的患者和系统特征。然而,距离作为急诊就诊预测因素的问题尚未得到充分研究。作者试图确定儿科医疗补助参保者的急诊就诊是否与到其初级保健提供者(PCP)的距离、到最近急诊科的距离以及到最近儿童医院的距离有关。
这项历史性队列研究纳入了26,038名18岁及以下儿童,他们被分配到隶属于一家医疗补助健康维护组织(HMO)的332家初级保健机构。预测变量包括从孩子家到其PCP机构的距离、从家到最近急诊科的距离以及从家到最近儿童医院的距离。结果变量是每个孩子的急诊就诊情况。使用负二项模型来确定距离变量与急诊就诊之间的关联,并对年龄、性别、种族以及先前发现会影响急诊就诊的医疗和初级保健机构特征进行了调整。距离变量被分为四分位数以检验非线性关联。
平均而言,儿童每人每年急诊就诊0.31次。在多变量模型中,居住在距离最近急诊科超过1.19英里的儿童的急诊就诊率比居住在距离最近急诊科0.5英里以内的儿童低11%(风险比[RR]=0.89,95%置信区间[CI]=0.81至0.99)。居住在距离其PCP 1.54至3.13英里之间的儿童的急诊就诊率比居住在距离其PCP 0.7英里以内的儿童高13%(RR=1.13,95%CI=1.03至1.24)。
地理变量在儿童急诊利用中起着重要作用,证实了急诊就诊系统层面决定因素的重要性,并为减少初级保健地理障碍的干预措施创造了机会。