Ann
Emerg Med 1996 Dec;28(6):677-82
Determinants of emergency department use: are race and ethnicity important?
Baker DW, Stevens CD, Brook RH.
Division of General Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta,
Georgia, USA.
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine whether race/ethnicity
is an important determinant of emergency department use.
METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional survey in a public
ED to determine self-reported ED visits over the preceding 3 months. The
study group comprised consecutive ambulatory patients (N = 1,049) with
nonemergency medical problems.
RESULTS: Blacks, whites, and Hispanics were equally likely
to report one or more visits to an ED in the 3 months before study enrollment.
Blacks were the most likely to report two or more ED visits in the preceding
3 months (19.0%), followed by whites (13.5%) and Hispanics (11.4%) (P
= .01; unadjusted odds ratio, 1.82 for blacks versus Hispanics). In multivariate
analysis, older age (P < .001), health insurance coverage (P < .001),
regular source of care (P < .001), and difficulty obtaining transportation
to a physician's office (P = .011) were positively associated with two
or more previous ED visits. After adjustment for these variables, race/ethnicity
was not significantly associated with ED use (P = .23; adjusted odds ratio
for blacks versus Hispanics, 1.48 [95% confidence interval, .95 to 2.30]).
CONCLUSION: Race/ethnicity was not an important determinant
of ED use after adjustment for age, health insurance coverage, regular
source of care, and barriers to health care. Population-based studies
of ED use should be conducted to further evaluate whether racial/ethnic
differences in ED use exist that are not explained by differences in demographics,
health, socioeconomic status, access to care, or other determinants of
ED use.
PMID: 8953959 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]