Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Science, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Science, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Ophthalmology. 2022 Dec;129(12):1412-1420. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2022.06.038. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
To investigate the association of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) with nationwide eye-related emergency department (ED) use.
Retrospective, cross-sectional study.
All patients who presented to the ED with an eye-related primary diagnosis were eligible for inclusion.
Nationally representative data from the US Nationwide Emergency Department Sample were used to analyze eye-related ED visits before (2010-2013) and after (2014-2017) the ACA was mandated. All ED visits were categorized as emergent or nonemergent or could not be determined.
The primary outcome was to compare the nationwide and regional incidence of eye-related ED visits per 100 000 US population before (2010-2013) and after (2014-2017) the ACA was mandated. Secondary outcome measures included change in payor status, proportion of urgent versus nonurgent visits, proportion of visits at teaching versus nonteaching hospitals, associated charges, and discharge disposition.
A total of 16 808 343 eye-related ED visits occurred in the United States during the study period from 2010 to 2017. Of these, 8 088 203 ED visits occurred before the ACA was mandated (2010-2013), and 8 720 766 ED visits occurred after the ACA was mandated (2014-2017). After the ACA was mandated in 2014, there was an initial decline in incidence of eye-related ED visits from 652.4 per 100 000 population in 2013 to 593.0 per 100 000 population in 2014, followed by a rapid increase in incidence to 658.5 per 100 000 population in 2015, with a further increase to 746.6 per 100 000 population in 2016. The percentage of uninsured patients decreased from 19.0% to 14.3%. The increase in ED use was greatest for individuals in the lowest income quartile (895.1 per 100 000 population in 2013 to 964.0 per 100 000 in 2017). Overall, 44.8% of ED visits were due to nonemergent eye conditions.
Although the ACA increased insurance coverage for Americans, theoretically increasing access to outpatient ophthalmic care, this did not decrease ED reliance for management of ophthalmic conditions. Additional measures beyond expanding insurance coverage may be necessary to provide high-quality, efficient, and equitable outpatient ophthalmic care to all Americans.
调查平价医疗法案(ACA)与全美眼部急诊就诊的相关性。
回顾性、横断面研究。
所有以眼部为主要诊断就诊于急诊的患者均符合入选标准。
使用美国全国急诊样本的全国代表性数据,分析 ACA 颁布前后(2010-2013 年和 2014-2017 年)的眼部急诊就诊情况。所有急诊就诊均被归类为紧急或非紧急,或无法确定。
主要结局指标为比较 ACA 颁布前后(2010-2013 年和 2014-2017 年)每 10 万美国人口中与眼部相关的急诊就诊的全国和地区发生率。次要结局指标包括支付方状态变化、紧急就诊与非紧急就诊的比例、教学医院与非教学医院就诊的比例、相关费用和出院去向。
研究期间(2010 年至 2017 年),美国共有 16808343 例眼部急诊就诊。其中,8088203 例就诊发生在 ACA 颁布之前(2010-2013 年),8720766 例就诊发生在 ACA 颁布之后(2014-2017 年)。ACA 于 2014 年颁布后,眼部急诊就诊的发生率最初从 2013 年的每 10 万人口 652.4 例下降到 2014 年的每 10 万人口 593.0 例,随后在 2015 年迅速上升至每 10 万人口 658.5 例,2016 年进一步上升至每 10 万人口 746.6 例。无保险患者的比例从 19.0%降至 14.3%。收入最低四分位数的急诊就诊人数增幅最大(2013 年为每 10 万人口 895.1 例,2017 年为每 10 万人口 964.0 例)。总体而言,44.8%的急诊就诊是由于非紧急眼部疾病。
尽管 ACA 增加了美国人的保险覆盖范围,理论上增加了获得眼科门诊护理的机会,但这并没有减少对急诊就诊的依赖以管理眼部疾病。除了扩大保险覆盖范围之外,可能还需要采取其他措施,为所有美国人提供高质量、高效率和公平的眼科门诊护理。