| Literature DB >> 29591539 |
Meng-Han Tsai1, Sudha Xirasagar1, Scott Carroll2, Charles S Bryan2, Pamela J Gallagher3, Kim Davis2, Edward C Jauch4.
Abstract
Reducing avoidable emergency department (ED) visits is an important health system goal. This is a retrospective cohort study of the impact of a primary care intervention including an in-hospital, free, adult clinic for poor uninsured patients on ED visit rates and emergency severity at a nonprofit hospital. We studied adult ED visits during August 16, 2009-August 15, 2011 (preintervention) and August 16, 2011-August 15, 2014 (postintervention). We compared pre- versus post-mean annual visit rates and discharge emergency severity index (ESI; triage and resource use-based, calculated Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality categories) among high-users (≥3 ED visits in 12 months) and occasional users. Annual adult ED visit volumes were 16 372 preintervention (47.5% by high-users), versus 18 496 postintervention. High-users' mean annual visit rates were 5.43 (top quartile) and 0.94 (bottom quartile) preintervention, versus 3.21 and 1.11, respectively, for returning high-users, postintervention (all P < .001). Postintervention, the visit rates of new high-users were lower (lowest and top quartile rates, 0.6 and 3.23) than preintervention high-users' rates in the preintervention period. Visit rates of the top quartile of occasional users also declined. Subgroup analysis of medically uninsured high-users showed similar results. Upon classifying preintervention high-users by emergency severity, postintervention mean ESI increased 24.5% among the lowest ESI quartile, and decreased 12.2% among the top quartile. Pre- and post-intervention sample demographics and comorbidities were similar. The observed reductions in overall ED visit rates, particularly low-severity visits; highest reductions observed among high-users and the top quartile of occasional users; and the pattern of changes in emergency severity support a positive impact of the primary care intervention.Entities:
Keywords: emergency department; high-users of emergency departments; longitudinal study of emergency department patients; low-acuity emergency department visits; medically uninsured; reducing avoidable ED visits; retrospective study
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29591539 PMCID: PMC5888802 DOI: 10.1177/0046958018763917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inquiry ISSN: 0046-9580 Impact factor: 1.730
Preintervention and Postintervention ED Patients: Demographic Characteristics, ED Use Frequency, and Medical Status.
| Preintervention (2 years) | Postintervention (3 years) | |
|---|---|---|
| Total ED visits | 40 763 | 67 954 |
| Visits by 1-time ED users ending in inpatient admission[ | 8020 | 12 465 |
| Study-eligible ED visits[ | 32 743 | 55 489 |
| Study-eligible ED patients | 20 153 | 30 754 (includes 3278 preperiod patients) |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 11 671 (57.9%) | 17 709 (57.6%) |
| Male | 8482 (42.1%) | 13 045 (42.4%) |
| Age (years) | ||
| 18-39 | 8278 (41.1%) | 12 413 (40.4%) |
| 40-64 | 7317 (36.3%) | 11 135 (36.2%) |
| ≥65 | 4558 (22.6%) | 7206 (23.4%) |
| Race | ||
| White | 8401 (41.7%) | 12 499 (40.6%) |
| Black | 11 398 (56.6%) | 17 591 (57.2%) |
| Other/unknown | 354 (1.8%) | 664 (2.2%) |
| Insurance (all visits insured vs otherwise) | ||
| Medicare, no visit uninsured | 4627 (23.0%) | 7084 (23.0%) |
| Medicaid, no visit uninsured | 671 (3.3%) | 801 (2.6%) |
| Private/other, no visit uninsured | 7968 (39.5%) | 12 119 (39.4%) |
| Uninsured at 1 or more visits | 6885 (34.1%) | 10 743 (34.9%) |
| Residence zip code | ||
| Hospital’s or adjacent zip codes | 8736 (43.4%) | 13 264 (43.1%) |
| Other zip codes | 11 407 (56.6%) | 17 481 (56.8%) |
| Comorbidity | ||
| Serious chronic comorbidity | 3833 (19.0%) | 5618 (18.3%) |
| Ambulatory care sensitive condition | 5473 (27.2%) | 8775 (28.5%) |
| None of the above | 10 747 (53.3%) | 16 284 (53.0%) |
| Missing | 100 (0.5%) | 77 (0.3%) |
| ESI score, | 3.62 (0.94) | 3.73 (0.93) |
| Annual ED visit frequency, | 1.91 (2.37) | 1.63 (1.58) |
| ED user type | ||
| High-user patients (≥3 visits in 12 consecutive months) | 5124 (25.4%) | 6899 (22.4%) (includes 2398 preperiod high-users) |
| Occasional users | 15 029 (74.6%) | 23 855 (77.6%) (includes 880 preperiod patients) |
Note. ESI is a calculated discharge ESI in the billing database. The original AHRQ ESI score is the initial triaged status 1-5, higher score indicating lower severity. In this hospital, the ESI is revised to reflect true emergency and clinical severity by calculating it at discharge, based on final diagnosis, resources used to treat, and discharge disposition. The documented ESI is also reverse coded (relative to the AHRQ scale) to align with the billing convention, higher ESI = higher severity. ED = emergency department; ESI = emergency severity index; AHRQ = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
These visits by 1-time users admitted as inpatients are excluded from the study, given that the intervention was designed to reduce avoidable ED visits that are remediable by primary care. These patients had no other ED visit in the study period, were not targeted by the intervention, and not amenable for study of subsequent behavior.
P < .01 for pre-post difference. Race and insurance were statistically significant, but not highlighted due to negligible magnitude of difference.
Figure 1.Pre- and postintervention ED visit volumes, total visits, and distributed by user type.
Note. ED = emergency department; IP = inpatient; Int = intervention.
aOne-time use, IP admitted: These are patients who visited the ED only once during the entire 5-year period and were admitted as inpatients. Because they did not visit any other time, they are excluded from the subsequent analysis which focused on tracking patient use behavior over time.
bNew high-users are those who were not high-users in the preintervention period. They consist of occasional users of the preintervention period and new patients from the community.
Preintervention Patients Classified Into Quartiles by Preintervention Visit Frequency: Pre- Versus Postintervention Visit Characteristics.
| Preintervention period | Postintervention period | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of preintervention patients | Total ED visits (2 years) | Mean annual visits per patient[ | Mean ESI, preintervention (range/SD) | Returning preintervention patients | Total visits (3 years) | Mean annual visits per patient[ | Mean ESI, postintervention (SD) | |
| Section A: Preintervention high-users | ||||||||
| Total | 5124 | 15 546 | 1.51 | 3.51 | 2985 | 12 505 | 1.40 | 3.61 |
| Quartile 1 | 3757 | 7088 | 0.94 | 3.53 | 2063 | 6870 | 1.11 | 3.62 |
| Quartile 2 | 571 | 2284 | 2.00 | 3.49 | 354 | 1535 | 1.45 | 3.61 |
| Quartile 3 | 448 | 2398 | 2.68 | 3.43 | 305 | 1570 | 1.72 | 3.56 |
| Quartile 4 | 348 | 3776 | 5.43 | 3.47 (2.0-4.9) | 263 | 2530 | 3.21 | 3.53 |
| Section B: Preintervention occasional users[ | ||||||||
| Total | 15 029 | 17 197 | 0.57 | 3.66 | 3367 | 6283 | 0.62 | 3.72 |
| Quartiles 1, 2, 3 | 12 933 | 12 933 | 0.50 | 3.69 | 2701 | 4939 | 0.61 | 3.73 |
| Quartile 4 | 2096 | 4264 | 1.02 | 3.54 | 666 | 1344 | 0.67 | 3.66 |
Note. Quartile cut-points are 1.5, 2.0, 3.0, and 27.5 visits annually for high-users. ESI = emergency severity index—adapted AHRQ ESI and reverse coded; higher ESI = higher severity; ED = emergency department; AHRQ = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Averaged per year for comparability of preintervention period (2 years) with postintervention period (3 years). Lowest quartile has a mean annual visit frequency of 0.94 due to visits outside the calendar years of the study period that were used to flag high-user status, ≥3 visits during any 12 consecutive months. Visits outside calendar period of study were excluded, causing the minimum annual visit rate of 0.5 per year for high-user patients. Cutoff point between Quartile 4 and the lower is 0.5 for occasional users, respectively. Quartiles 1 to 3 are pooled due to 12 933 patients having only 1 visit in the preintervention period, that is, annual visit rate = 0.5.
ESI range for occasional users is 1.0 to 5.0 for both groups.
P < .01 for pre-post difference.
Visit Frequency and Emergency Severity in the Postintervention Period: New High-Users Versus Returning Preintervention High-Users.
| New postintervention high-users | Visits by returning preintervention high-users | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quartile based on visit frequency[ | No. of patients | Total visits (3 years) | Mean annual visits per patient[ | Mean of patients’ ESI (range) | Preintervention quartile group[ | No. of patients | Total ED visits (3 years) | Mean annual visits per patient (range) | Mean of patients’ ESI (SD) |
| Total | 5011 | 14 968 | 1.00 | 3.65 | Total | 2985 | 12 505 | 1.40 | 3.61 |
| Quartiles 1 and 2 | 3454 | 6258 | 0.60 | 3.68 | Quartile 1 | 2063 | 6870 | 1.11 | 3.62 |
| — | — | — | — | — | Quartile 2 | 354 | 1535 | 1.45 | 3.61 (0.75) |
| Quartile 3 | 1238 | 5621 | 1.51 | 3.58 (1.0-5.0) | Quartile 3 | 305 | 1570 | 1.72 | 3.56 (0.74) |
| Quartile 4 | 319 | 3089 | 3.23 (2.3,13.0) | 3.62 (2.1-5.0) | Quartile 4 | 263 | 2530 | 3.21 (0.3-16.0) | 3.53 (0.74) |
Note. Despite statistically significant difference between quartile mean values between the 2 patient groups, the numeric values show convergence of visit rates and severity of new high-users and preintervention high-users in the postintervention period. ESI = emergency severity index—adapted AHRQ ESI and reverse coded; higher ESI = higher severity; ED = emergency department; AHRQ = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Quartiles’ cut-points for mean annual visits: new high-users: Q1 and Q2 (median) 1.0; Q3: 2.0, Q4:13.0. Q1 and Q2 are pooled because 50% of the sample had a mean annual visit rate of 1.0.
P < .05 for new high-users versus preintervention high-users.