Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, Sylmar, California.
David Geffen UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California.
Milbank Q. 2022 Jun;100(2):464-491. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12563. Epub 2022 Mar 22.
Policy Points Clarifications to Senate Bill (SB) 1152 are necessary to address the differences between inpatient and emergency department (ED) discharge processes, determine how frequently an ED must deliver the SB 1152 bundle of services to a single patient, and establish expectations for compliance during off-hours when social services are unavailable. Because homelessness cannot be resolved in a single ED visit, the state should provide funding to support housing-focused case workers that will follow patients experiencing homelessness (PEH) through the transition from temporary shelters to permanent supportive housing. Medi-Cal could fund the delivery of the SB 1152 bundle of services to defray the costs to public hospitals that provide care for high numbers of PEH. California legislators should consider complementary legislation to increase funding for shelters so that sufficient capacity is available to accept PEH from EDs and hospitals, and to fund alternative strategies to prevent poverty and the upstream root causes of homelessness itself.
Prompted by stories of "patient dumping," California enacted Senate Bill (SB) 1152, which mandates that hospitals offer patients experiencing homelessness (PEH) a set of resources at discharge to ensure safety and prevent dumping.
To evaluate interventions to meet the requirements of SB 1152 across three emergency departments (EDs) of a Los Angeles County public hospital system with a combined annual census of 260,000 visits, we used an explanatory sequential mixed methods approach, focusing first on quantitative evaluation and then using information from qualitative interviews to explain the quantitative findings.
In total, 2.9% (1,515/52,607) of encounters involved PEH. Documentation of compliance with the eight required components of SB 1152 was low, ranging from 9.0% to 33.9%. Twenty-five provider interviews confirmed support for providing assistance to PEH in the ED, but the participants described barriers to compliance, including challenges in implementing universal screening for homelessness, incongruity of the requirements with the ED setting, the complexity of the patients, and the limitations of SB 1152 as a health policy.
Despite operationalizing universal screening for homelessness, we found poor compliance with SB 1152 and identified multiple barriers to implementation.
背景:
加州颁布了参议院法案 1152(SB 1152),以回应“病人倾倒”的相关报道。该法案要求医院在病人出院时向无家可归者(PEH)提供一套资源,以确保其安全,防止倾倒行为。
目的:
评估在洛杉矶县公立医院系统的三个急诊部(ED)中,满足 SB 1152 要求的干预措施。该医院系统每年的就诊量约为 26 万,使用解释性顺序混合方法,首先关注定量评估,然后使用定性访谈信息来解释定量结果。
发现:
在总共 52607 次就诊中,有 2.9%(1515 次)涉及 PEH。记录的 SB 1152 八项要求的合规性较低,范围从 9.0%到 33.9%。25 名提供者访谈证实了在 ED 为 PEH 提供帮助的支持,但参与者描述了合规障碍,包括实施普遍筛查无家可归的挑战、要求与 ED 设置的不匹配、患者的复杂性,以及 SB 1152 作为一项卫生政策的局限性。
结论:
尽管实施了普遍的无家可归筛查,但我们发现 SB 1152 的合规性较差,并确定了实施的多个障碍。