Aldridge Robert W, Menezes Dee, Lewer Dan, Cornes Michelle, Evans Hannah, Blackburn Ruth M, Byng Richard, Clark Michael, Denaxas Spiros, Fuller James, Hewett Nigel, Kilmister Alan, Luchenski Serena, Manthorpe Jill, McKee Martin, Neale Joanne, Story Alistair, Tinelli Michela, Whiteford Martin, Wurie Fatima, Hayward Andrew
Public Health Data Science, Institute of Health Informatics, University College London, London, NW1 2DA, UK.
Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health, Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care, University College London, London, NW1 2DA, UK.
Wellcome Open Res. 2019 Mar 11;4:49. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15151.1. eCollection 2019.
: Homelessness has increased by 165% since 2010 in England, with evidence from many settings that those affected experience high levels of mortality. In this paper we examine the contribution of different causes of death to overall mortality in homeless people recently admitted to hospitals in England with specialist integrated homeless health and care (SIHHC) schemes. : We undertook an analysis of linked hospital admission records and mortality data for people attending any one of 17 SIHHC schemes between 1st November 2013 and 30th November 2016. Our primary outcome was death, which we analysed in subgroups of 10th version international classification of disease (ICD-10) specific deaths; and deaths from amenable causes. We compared our results to a sample of people living in areas of high social deprivation (IMD5 group). : We collected data on 3,882 individual homeless hospital admissions that were linked to 600 deaths. The median age of death was 51.6 years (interquartile range 42.7-60.2) for SIHHC and 71.5 for the IMD5 (60.67-79.0). The top three underlying causes of death by ICD-10 chapter in the SIHHC group were external causes of death (21.7%; 130/600), cancer (19.0%; 114/600) and digestive disease (19.0%; 114/600). The percentage of deaths due to an amenable cause after age and sex weighting was 30.2% in the homeless SIHHC group (181/600) compared to 23.0% in the IMD5 group (578/2,512). : Nearly one in three homeless deaths were due to causes amenable to timely and effective health care. The high burden of amenable deaths highlights the extreme health harms of homelessness and the need for greater emphasis on prevention of homelessness and early healthcare interventions.
自2010年以来,英格兰的无家可归者数量增加了165%,许多情况表明,受影响者的死亡率很高。在本文中,我们研究了不同死因对近期因专业综合无家可归者健康与护理(SIHHC)计划而入住英格兰医院的无家可归者总体死亡率的影响。
我们对2013年11月1日至2016年11月30日期间参加17个SIHHC计划中任何一个计划的人员的医院入院记录和死亡率数据进行了关联分析。我们的主要结局是死亡,我们按国际疾病分类第10版(ICD-10)特定死因的亚组以及可避免死因导致的死亡进行了分析。我们将结果与生活在社会剥夺程度高的地区的人群样本(IMD5组)进行了比较。
我们收集了3882例与600例死亡相关的无家可归者住院个体数据。SIHHC组的死亡年龄中位数为51.6岁(四分位间距42.7 - 60.2),IMD5组为71.5岁(60.67 - 79.0)。SIHHC组按ICD-10章节划分的前三大潜在死因是外部死因(21.7%;130/600)、癌症(19.0%;114/600)和消化系统疾病(19.0%;114/600)。在按年龄和性别加权后,无家可归的SIHHC组中因可避免死因导致的死亡百分比为30.2%(181/600),而IMD5组为23.0%(578/2512)。
近三分之一的无家可归者死亡是由可通过及时有效的医疗保健解决的原因导致的。可避免死亡的高负担凸显了无家可归对健康造成的极端危害,以及需要更加强调预防无家可归和早期医疗干预。