Cecil Elizabeth, Bottle Alex, Sharland Mike, Saxena Sonia
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, United Kingdom.
Ann Fam Med. 2015 May-Jun;13(3):214-20. doi: 10.1370/afm.1786.
We aimed to assess the impact of UK primary care policy reforms implemented in April 2004 on potentially avoidable unplanned short-stay hospital admissions for children with primary care-sensitive conditions.
We conducted an interrupted time series analysis of hospital admissions for all children aged younger than 15 years in England between April 2000 and March 2012 using data from National Health Service public hospitals in England. The main outcomes were annual short-stay (<2-day) unplanned hospital admission rates for primary care-sensitive infectious and chronic conditions.
There were 7.8 million unplanned admissions over the study period. More than one-half (4,144,729 of 7,831,633) were short-stay admissions for potentially avoidable infectious and chronic conditions. The primary care policy reforms of April 2004 were associated with an 8% increase in short-stay admission rates for chronic conditions, equivalent to 8,500 additional admissions, above the 3% annual increasing trend. Policy reforms were not associated with an increase in short-stay admission rates for infectious illness, which were increasing by 5% annually before April 2004. The proportion of primary care-referred admissions was falling before the reforms, and there were further sharp reductions in 2004.
The introduction of primary care policy reforms coincided with an increase in short-stay admission rates for children with primary care-sensitive chronic conditions, and with more children being admitted through emergency departments. Short-stay admission rates for primary care-sensitive infectious illness increased more steadily and could be related to lowered thresholds for hospital admission.
我们旨在评估2004年4月实施的英国初级保健政策改革对患有初级保健敏感疾病的儿童可能避免的非计划短期住院的影响。
我们利用英国国家医疗服务体系公立医院的数据,对2000年4月至2012年3月期间英格兰所有15岁以下儿童的住院情况进行了中断时间序列分析。主要结果是初级保健敏感的传染性和慢性疾病的年度短期(<2天)非计划住院率。
在研究期间有780万例非计划住院。超过一半(7831633例中的4144729例)是因可能避免的传染性和慢性疾病而进行的短期住院。2004年4月的初级保健政策改革与慢性病短期住院率增加8%相关,相当于增加了8500例住院,高于每年3%的增长趋势。政策改革与传染病短期住院率的增加无关,在2004年4月之前,传染病短期住院率每年增加5%。在改革之前,由初级保健转诊的住院比例就在下降,2004年进一步大幅下降。
初级保健政策改革的实施恰逢患有初级保健敏感慢性病的儿童短期住院率增加,且更多儿童通过急诊科入院。初级保健敏感传染病的短期住院率增长更为稳定,这可能与住院门槛降低有关。