1 / 14

Predictors of Emergency Department Utilization by Homeless Persons: A National Study

Predictors of Emergency Department Utilization by Homeless Persons: A National Study. Clarilee Hauser PhD, RN. Homelessness and ED Overcrowding: A Health Care Crisis. Study Purpose: To determine the extent to which homeless persons in the United States use the ED for non-urgent care

manasa
Download Presentation

Predictors of Emergency Department Utilization by Homeless Persons: A National Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Predictors of Emergency Department Utilization by Homeless Persons: A National Study Clarilee Hauser PhD, RN

  2. Homelessness and ED Overcrowding: A Health Care Crisis • Study Purpose: • To determine the extent to which homeless persons in the United States use the ED for non-urgent care • To determine the factors that are predictive of ED use for non-urgent care

  3. Research Questions • What is the relationship between housing status and ED use? • What is the relationship between housing status and urgent versus non-urgent use of the ED? • What are the predictors of ED utilization for non-urgent visits?

  4. Background • Homelessness has a negative effect on health • The use of the ED as a regular source of health care results in poor health outcomes • ED overcrowding contributes to adelay inemergency care that results in increased morbidity and mortality for ED patients • ED overcrowding contributes to the increasing cost of health care in the United States

  5. Methodology • Secondary analysis of the National Hospital Ambulatory Care Survey 2005 (NHAMCS 2005) • A national sample • A public-use database • Demographic characteristics of the patient population • In 2005, housing status was added to the Patient Record Form for the first time

  6. Hierarchy of NHAMCS 2005 Survey Design PSU  Hospital Hospital ESA ESA ESA ESA Visit Visit Visit Visit Visit Visit Visit Visit

  7. Dependent Variables Use of ED Number of patient visits Type of Use Triage category Independent Variables Predisposing Housing status Age Gender Race/Ethnicity Geographic location Month/day/time of day Variables

  8. Enabling Insurance status Hospital ownership Need Presenting complaint Drug/alcohol use/abuse Level of pain Injury/poisoning intentional Admit to hospital Physician diagnosis Independent Variables

  9. What is the Relationship Between Housing Status and ED Use? Homeless persons have a significantly higher likelihood of visiting the ED than not homeless (p = 0.007)

  10. What is the Relationship Between Housing Status and Urgent Versus Non-Urgent Use of the ED? Homelessness and Urgency N=24,311Non-Urgent Urgent Not Homeless 16.89% 83.11% Homeless18.92% 81.08% Total 16.90% 83.10% p = 0.763

  11. What Are the Predictors of ED Utilization for Non-Urgent Visits? Overall Tests for the Likelihood of Non-Urgent Visit N=24, 311 Variable Wald F Significance Gender 6.473 *.012 Race/Ethnicity 4.203 **.003 Season 3.061 *.030 Insurance 16.850 ***.000 Diagnosis 14.183 ***.000 Age 13.361 ***.000

  12. Summary of Results • Greater proportion of the homeless population than the not homeless population used the ED in 2005 (p = 0.007) • There was no statistically significant difference in non-urgent use (p = 0.763) • Non-urgent ED visits were 1.4 times more likely to be made by persons without health insurance than by those with health insurance

  13. Implications for Policy, Practice and Delivery • Are there adequate health care services for homeless persons? • What is the role of the ED? • Universal health care could result in less use of the ED and lower health care costs

  14. Predictors of Emergency Department Utilization by Homeless Persons: A National Study Clarilee Hauser PhD, RN

More Related