Doran Kelly M, Shumway Martha, Hoff Rani A, Blackstock Oni J, Dilworth Samantha E, Riley Elise D
Department of Emergency Medicine and Department of Population Health, NYU School of Medicine, Bellevue Hospital Center, New York, New York; U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, California.
Womens Health Issues. 2014 Sep-Oct;24(5):535-41. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2014.06.003.
To examine correlates of emergency department (ED) use and hospitalizations in a community-based cohort of homeless and unstably housed women, with a focus on the role of physical health and pain.
We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of baseline survey results from a study of homeless and unstably housed women in San Francisco. Primary outcomes were any self-reported ED visit and inpatient hospitalization over the prior 6 months. Primary independent variables of interest were self-reported physical health status, as measured by the Short Form-12 (SF-12), and bodily pain. Other potential covariates were organized using the Gelberg-Andersen Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations. Standard bivariate and multivariable logistic regression techniques were used.
Three hundred homeless and unstably housed women were included in the study, of whom 37.7% reported having an ED visit and 23.0% reported being hospitalized in the prior 6 months. Mean SF-12 physical health scores indicated poorer than average health compared with the U.S. norm. Most women (79.3%) reported at least some limitation in their daily activities owing to pain. In adjusted analyses, moderate and high levels of bodily pain were significantly correlated with ED visits (odds ratio [OR], 2.92 and OR, 2.57) and hospitalizations (OR, 6.13 and OR, 2.49). As SF-12 physical health scores decreased, indicating worse health, the odds of ED use increased. Predisposing, enabling, and additional need factors did not mediate these associations.
Physical health and bodily pain are important correlates of ED visits and hospitalizations among homeless and unstably housed women. Interventions to reduce ED use among women who are homeless should address the high levels of pain in this population.
在一个以社区为基础的无家可归和住房不稳定的女性队列中,研究急诊科(ED)就诊和住院的相关因素,重点关注身体健康和疼痛的作用。
我们对旧金山一项关于无家可归和住房不稳定女性的研究的基线调查结果进行了横断面分析。主要结局是在过去6个月内任何自我报告的急诊科就诊和住院情况。感兴趣的主要自变量是通过简短健康调查问卷12项(SF-12)测量的自我报告的身体健康状况和身体疼痛。其他潜在的协变量使用针对弱势群体的Gelberg-Andersen行为模型进行组织。采用标准的双变量和多变量逻辑回归技术。
300名无家可归和住房不稳定的女性被纳入研究,其中37.7%报告在过去6个月内有过急诊科就诊,23.0%报告曾住院治疗。SF-12身体健康评分均值表明,与美国标准相比,健康状况较差。大多数女性(79.3%)报告由于疼痛,其日常活动至少受到一定限制。在调整分析中,中度和高度身体疼痛与急诊科就诊(优势比[OR]分别为2.92和2.57)和住院(OR分别为6.13和2.49)显著相关。随着SF-12身体健康评分降低,表明健康状况恶化,使用急诊科的几率增加。易患因素、促成因素和额外需求因素并未介导这些关联。
身体健康和身体疼痛是无家可归和住房不稳定女性急诊科就诊和住院的重要相关因素。减少无家可归女性急诊科就诊的干预措施应解决该人群中高水平的疼痛问题。