Dy Christopher J, Lyman Stephen, Do Huong T, Fabricant Peter D, Marx Robert G, Green Daniel W
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2014 Jul-Aug;34(5):548-51. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000000143.
Previous research has demonstrated both greater difficulty in obtaining follow-up appointments and increased likelihood of return visits to the emergency department (ED) for patients with government-funded insurance plans. The purpose of the current study is to determine whether socioeconomic factors, such as race and insurance type, are associated with the frequency of repeat ED visits in pediatric patients with closed fractures.
A review of ED visit data over a 2-year period from a statewide hospital discharge database in New York was conducted. Discharges for patients with a unique person identifier in the database age 17 years and younger were examined for an ICD-9 diagnosis of closed upper or lower extremity fracture. Age, sex, race, and insurance type for patients with a return ED visit within 8 weeks for the same fracture diagnosis were compared with those without a return visit using standard univariate statistical tests and logistic regression analyses.
Of the 68,236 visits reviewed, the revisit rate was 0.85%. Patients of nonwhite or unidentified race were significantly more likely to have a revisit than white patients (OR, 1.27; P=0.006). Patients with government-funded insurance were significantly more likely to have a revisit than those without government-funded insurance (OR, 1.55; P<0.001). Patients with private insurance were significantly less likely to have a revisit than those without private insurance (OR, 0.72; P=0.001).
Our analysis revealed that nonwhite patients are more likely to return to the ED within 8 weeks for the same fracture diagnosis. Patients with government insurance are 55% more likely to have a revisit, whereas patients with private insurance are 28% less likely to have a revisit. Our results suggest that socioeconomic disparities exist in access to orthopaedic care for closed fractures in a pediatric population. Physicians and policy makers should be mindful of these health care disparities when striving to improve access to care among patients and resource utilization in the ED.
Prognostic level II.
先前的研究表明,对于参加政府资助保险计划的患者,获得随访预约的难度更大,且返回急诊科(ED)复诊的可能性增加。本研究的目的是确定社会经济因素,如种族和保险类型,是否与闭合性骨折小儿患者的急诊复诊频率相关。
对纽约州全州医院出院数据库中2年期间的急诊就诊数据进行了回顾。对数据库中年龄在17岁及以下且具有唯一个人标识符的患者出院记录进行检查,以确定ICD - 9诊断为闭合性上肢或下肢骨折的情况。使用标准单变量统计检验和逻辑回归分析,将在8周内因相同骨折诊断返回急诊就诊的患者的年龄、性别、种族和保险类型与未返回就诊的患者进行比较。
在审查的68236次就诊中,复诊率为0.85%。非白人或种族不明的患者比白人患者复诊的可能性显著更高(比值比[OR],1.27;P = 0.006)。参加政府资助保险的患者比未参加政府资助保险的患者复诊的可能性显著更高(OR,1.55;P < 0.001)。有私人保险的患者比没有私人保险的患者复诊的可能性显著更低(OR,0.72;P = 0.001)。
我们的分析显示,非白人患者在8周内因相同骨折诊断返回急诊的可能性更大。参加政府保险的患者复诊的可能性高55%,而有私人保险的患者复诊的可能性低28%。我们的结果表明,小儿人群闭合性骨折的骨科护理可及性存在社会经济差异。医生和政策制定者在努力改善患者的护理可及性和急诊科资源利用时,应注意这些医疗保健差异。
预后II级。