Department of Emergency Medicine, University of British Columbia, Diamond Health Care Centre, 11th Floor - 2775 Laurel Street, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1M9, Canada.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Vancouver General Hospital, 920 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1M9, Canada.
BMC Emerg Med. 2022 Jul 14;22(1):127. doi: 10.1186/s12873-022-00673-x.
Substance use is common among people who visit emergency departments (EDs) frequently. We aimed to characterize subgroups within this cohort to better understand care needs/gaps, and generalizability of characteristics in three Canadian provinces.
This was a retrospective cohort study (April 1, 2013 to March 31, 2016) of ED patients in Ontario, Alberta, and British Columbia (B.C.) We included patients ≥ 18 years with substance use-related healthcare contact during the study period and frequent ED visits, defined as those in the top 10% of ED utilization when all patients were ordered by annual ED visit number. We used linked administrative databases including ED visits and hospitalizations (all provinces); mental heath-related hospitalizations (Ontario and Alberta); and prescriptions, physician services, and mortality (B.C.). We compared to cohorts of people with (1) frequent ED visits and no substance use, and (2) non-frequent ED visits and substance use. We employed cluster analysis to identify subgroups with distinct visit patterns and clinical characteristics during index year, April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2015.
In 2014/15, we identified 19,604, 7,706, and 9,404 people with frequent ED visits and substance use in Ontario, Alberta, and B.C (median 37-43 years; 60.9-63.0% male), whose ED visits and hospitalizations were higher than comparison groups. In all provinces, cluster analyses identified subgroups with "extreme" and "moderate" frequent visits (median 13-19 versus 4-6 visits/year). "Extreme" versus "moderate" subgroups had more hospitalizations, mental health-related ED visits, general practitioner visits but less continuity with one provider, more commonly left against medical advice, and had higher 365-day mortality in B.C. (9.3% versus 6.6%; versus 10.4% among people with frequent ED visits and no substance use, and 4.3% among people with non-frequent ED visits and substance use). The most common ED diagnosis was acute alcohol intoxication in all subgroups.
Subgroups of people with "extreme" (13-19 visits/year) and "moderate" (4-6 visits/year) frequent ED visits and substance use had similar utilization patterns and characteristics in Ontario, Alberta, and B.C., and the "extreme" subgroup had high mortality. Our findings suggest a need for improved evidence-based substance use disorder management, and strengthened continuity with primary and mental healthcare.
在频繁就诊于急诊部(ED)的人群中,物质使用较为常见。我们旨在对这一群体内的亚组进行描述,以便更好地了解护理需求/差距,并理解在加拿大三个省份的特征的普遍性。
这是一项回顾性队列研究(2013 年 4 月 1 日至 2016 年 3 月 31 日),纳入了安大略省、艾伯塔省和不列颠哥伦比亚省(B.C.)ED 患者。我们纳入了研究期间存在物质使用相关医疗保健接触且 ED 就诊频繁的患者,定义为当按年度 ED 就诊次数对所有患者进行排序时,位于前 10%的患者。我们使用了包括 ED 就诊和住院治疗(所有省份);心理健康相关住院治疗(安大略省和艾伯塔省);以及处方、医生服务和死亡率(B.C.)在内的链接行政数据库。我们将其与(1)频繁就诊于 ED 且无物质使用的患者,和(2)非频繁就诊于 ED 且有物质使用的患者进行了比较。我们采用聚类分析来识别 2014 年 4 月 1 日至 2015 年 3 月 31 日索引年内具有不同就诊模式和临床特征的亚组。
在 2014/15 年,我们在安大略省、艾伯塔省和 B.C.中确定了 19604 例、7706 例和 9404 例频繁就诊于 ED 且存在物质使用的患者(中位数 37-43 岁;60.9-63.0%为男性),其 ED 就诊和住院治疗次数高于对照组。在所有省份,聚类分析都确定了具有“极端”和“中度”频繁就诊(中位数 13-19 次与 4-6 次/年)的亚组。“极端”亚组与“中度”亚组相比,其住院治疗、心理健康相关 ED 就诊、全科医生就诊次数更多,但与一位提供者的连续性较差,更常被劝导出院,B.C.的 365 天死亡率更高(9.3%比 6.6%;与频繁就诊于 ED 且无物质使用的患者相比为 10.4%,与非频繁就诊于 ED 且有物质使用的患者相比为 4.3%)。所有亚组中最常见的 ED 诊断是急性酒精中毒。
在安大略省、艾伯塔省和 B.C.,具有“极端”(13-19 次就诊/年)和“中度”(4-6 次就诊/年)频繁就诊且存在物质使用的患者亚组具有相似的就诊模式和特征,且“极端”亚组的死亡率较高。我们的研究结果表明,需要加强基于证据的物质使用障碍管理,并加强与初级保健和精神保健的连续性。