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Modeling factors influencing the demand for emergency department services in ontario: a comparison of methods

机译:影响安大略省急诊服务需求的建模因素:方法比较

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Background Emergency departments are medical treatment facilities, designed to provide episodic care to patients suffering from acute injuries and illnesses as well as patients who are experiencing sporadic flare-ups of underlying chronic medical conditions which require immediate attention. Supply and demand for emergency department services varies across geographic regions and time. Some persons do not rely on the service at all whereas; others use the service on repeated occasions. Issues regarding increased wait times for services and crowding illustrate the need to investigate which factors are associated with increased frequency of emergency department utilization. The evidence from this study can help inform policy makers on the appropriate mix of supply and demand targeted health care policies necessary to ensure that patients receive appropriate health care delivery in an efficient and cost-effective manner. The purpose of this report is to assess those factors resulting in increased demand for emergency department services in Ontario. We assess how utilization rates vary according to the severity of patient presentation in the emergency department. We are specifically interested in the impact that access to primary care physicians has on the demand for emergency department services. Additionally, we wish to investigate these trends using a series of novel regression models for count outcomes which have yet to be employed in the domain of emergency medical research. Methods Data regarding the frequency of emergency department visits for the respondents of Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) during our study interval (2003-2005) are obtained from the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS). Patients' emergency department utilizations were linked with information from the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) which provides individual level medical, socio-demographic, psychological and behavioral information for investigating predictors of increased emergency department utilization. Six different multiple regression models for count data were fitted to assess the influence of predictors on demand for emergency department services, including: Poisson, Negative Binomial, Zero-Inflated Poisson, Zero-Inflated Negative Binomial, Hurdle Poisson, and Hurdle Negative Binomial. Comparison of competing models was assessed by the Vuong test statistic. Results The CCHS cycle 2.1 respondents were a roughly equal mix of males (50.4%) and females (49.6%). The majority (86.2%) were young-middle aged adults between the ages of 20-64, living in predominantly urban environments (85.9%), with mid-high household incomes (92.2%) and well-educated, receiving at least a high-school diploma (84.1%). Many participants reported no chronic disease (51.9%), fell into a small number (0-5) of ambulatory diagnostic groups (62.3%), and perceived their health status as good/excellent (88.1%); however, were projected to have high Resource Utilization Band levels of health resource utilization (68.2%). These factors were largely stable for CCHS cycle 3.1 respondents. Factors influencing demand for emergency department services varied according to the severity of triage scores at initial presentation. For example, although a non-significant predictor of the odds of emergency department utilization in high severity cases, access to a primary care physician was a statistically significant predictor of the likelihood of emergency department utilization (OR: 0.69; 95% CI OR: 0.63-0.75) and the rate of emergency department utilization (RR: 0.57; 95% CI RR: 0.50-0.66) in low severity cases. Conclusion Using a theoretically appropriate hurdle negative binomial regression model this unique study illustrates that access to a primary care physician is an important predictor of both the odds and rate of emergency department utilization in Ontario. Restructuring primary care services, with aims of increasing access to undersupplied populations may result in decreased emergency department utilization rates by approximately 43% for low severity triage level cases.
机译:背景技术急诊科是医疗机构,旨在为遭受急性伤害和疾病的患者以及正在经历潜在的慢性病零星爆发的患者提供紧急护理,需要立即关注。急诊科服务的供求因地理区域和时间而异。有些人根本不依赖服务,而;其他人会重复使用该服务。有关增加服务等待时间和拥挤的问题说明需要研究哪些因素与急诊部门使用频率增加有关。这项研究的证据可以帮助决策者了解适当的供需针对性医疗政策组合,以确保患者以有效和具有成本效益的方式获得适当的医疗服务。本报告的目的是评估导致安大略省急诊服务需求增加的那些因素。我们评估急诊室中患者使用情况的严重程度,利用率如何变化。我们特别希望获得初级保健医生会对急诊科服务的需求产生影响。此外,我们希望使用一系列新颖的回归模型来研究这些趋势,以计算尚未在急诊医学研究领域中使用的计数结果。方法在我们的研究时间段(2003年至2005年)中,加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS)的急诊科就诊频率数据是从国家门诊报告系统(NACRS)获得的。患者的急诊室利用率与加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS)的信息相关联,该调查提供了个人级别的医疗,社会人口统计,心理和行为信息,用于调查急诊室利用率增加的预测因素。拟合了六种不同的计数数据多元回归模型来评估预测变量对急诊部门服务需求的影响,包括:泊松,负二项式,零膨胀泊松,零膨胀负二项式,跨栏泊松和跨栏负二项式。竞争模型的比较通过Vuong检验统计量进行评估。结果CCHS周期2.1的受访者中,男性(50.4%)和女性(49.6%)大致相等。大部分(86.2%)是20-64岁之间的中青年人,主要居住在城市环境中(85.9%),家庭中高收入(92.2%)且受过良好教育,至少获得了高学校文凭(84.1%)。许多参与者报告没有慢性病(51.9%),属于少数(0-5)的门诊诊断组(62.3%),并且认为他们的健康状况良好/良好(88.1%);但是,预计健康资源利用的资源利用带水平较高(68.2%)。对于CCHS周期3.1的受访者,这些因素在很大程度上是稳定的。影响急诊服务需求的因素根据初次就诊时的分诊评分的严重程度而有所不同。例如,尽管在严重程度较高的情况下,急诊室使用几率的预测值并不显着,但就诊急诊医生的可能性在统计学上是重要的预测因素(OR:0.69; 95%CI OR:0.63 -0.75)和低严重度情况下的急诊部门利用率(RR:0.57; 95%CI RR:0.50-0.66)。结论使用理论上合适的跨栏负二项式回归模型,这项独特的研究表明,就医的可能性是安大略省急诊部门使用率和发生率的重要预测指标。重组初级保健服务,旨在增加对供不应求的人群的访问,对于低严重度分类级别的病例,可能会使急诊部门的使用率降低约43%。

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