Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2020 Oct 22;10(10):e035625. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035625.
The aims of our study were to describe the disease spectrum of refugees, to analyse to what extent their healthcare needs could be met in an outpatient primary care walk-in clinic and which cases required additional services from secondary care (ie, outpatient specialists or hospitals).
Retrospective longitudinal observational study.
The study was based on routine data from a walk-in clinic in the largest central first reception centre in Hamburg, Germany between 4 November 2015 and 21 July 2016.
1467 asylum seekers with 4006 episodes of care (ie, distinctive health problems) resulting in 5545 consultations. The patients were 60% men and had a mean age of 23.2 years. About 90% of the patients were from Central Asia or from the Middle East and North Africa.
The endpoint of our analyses was referral to secondary care. Time to event was defined as days under treatment until the first referral. Predictor variables were the patients' diagnoses grouped in 46 categories. The data set was analysed by Cox regression allowing for multiple failure times per patient. This analysis was adjusted for age, sex and country of origin.
Referrals to secondary care occurred in 15.5% of the episodes. The diagnosis groups with the highest referral rates were 'eye' (HR 4.9; 95% CI 3.12 to 7.8; p≤0.001), 'teeth/gum symptom/complaint or disease' (3.51; 2.52 to 4.9; p≤0.001) and 'urological system/female or male genital' (2.50; 1.66 to 3.77; p≤0.001). Age, sex and country of origin had no significant effect on time until referral.
In most cases, the walk-in clinic physicians could provide first-line medical care for the health problems of patients not integrated in the German healthcare system. Additional resources were needed particularly not only for visual impairment and dental problems but also for psychological disorders, antenatal care and certain infections and injuries.
本研究旨在描述难民的疾病谱,分析他们的医疗需求在门诊初级保健诊所能够得到满足的程度,以及哪些病例需要二级医疗服务(即门诊专科医生或医院)。
回顾性纵向观察性研究。
该研究基于德国汉堡最大的中央第一接待中心的一个门诊诊所 2015 年 11 月 4 日至 2016 年 7 月 21 日期间的常规数据。
1467 名寻求庇护者,共发生 4006 例护理事件(即不同的健康问题),导致 5545 次就诊。患者中 60%为男性,平均年龄为 23.2 岁。约 90%的患者来自中亚或中东和北非地区。
我们分析的终点是转介至二级医疗。事件时间定义为接受治疗的天数,直到首次转介。预测变量是按 46 个类别分组的患者诊断。使用 Cox 回归对数据进行分析,允许每个患者多次失败。该分析调整了年龄、性别和原籍国。
在 15.5%的病例中,需要向二级医疗转诊。转诊率最高的诊断组是“眼睛”(HR 4.9;95%CI 3.12 至 7.8;p≤0.001)、“牙齿/牙龈症状/抱怨或疾病”(3.51;2.52 至 4.9;p≤0.001)和“泌尿系统/女性或男性生殖系统”(2.50;1.66 至 3.77;p≤0.001)。年龄、性别和原籍国对转介时间没有显著影响。
在大多数情况下,门诊诊所医生可以为未纳入德国医疗保健系统的患者的健康问题提供一线医疗护理。不仅需要额外的资源来治疗视力障碍和牙科问题,还需要治疗心理障碍、产前护理以及某些感染和损伤。