Healthcare Utilization Patterns Among Migrant Populations: Increased Readmissions Suggest Poorer Access. A Population-Wide Retrospective Cohort Study

Elma Dervić, Ola Ali, Carola Deischinger, Rafael Prieto-Curiel, Rainer Stütz, Ellenor Mittendorfer-Rutz, Peter Klimek
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Abstract

Equal access to health ensures that all citizens, regardless of socio-economic status, can achieve optimal health, leading to a more productive, equitable, and resilient society. Yet, migrant populations were frequently observed to have lower access to health. The reasons for this are not entirely clear and may include language barriers, a lack of knowledge of the healthcare system, and selective migration (a "healthy migrant" effect). We use extensive medical claims data from Austria (13 million hospital stays of approximately 4 million individuals) to compare the healthcare utilization patterns between Austrians and non-Austrians. We looked at the differences in primary diagnoses and hospital sections of initial hospital admission across different nationalities. We hypothesize that cohorts experiencing the healthy migrant effect show lower readmission rates after hospitalization compared to migrant populations that are in poorer health but show lower hospitalization rates due to barriers in access. We indeed find that all nationalities showed lower hospitalization rates than Austrians, except for Germans, who exhibit a similar healthcare usage to Austrians. Although around 20\% of the population has a migration background, non-Austrian citizens account for only 9.4% of the hospital patients and 9.79% of hospital nights. However, results for readmission rates are much more divergent. Nationalities like Hungary, Romania, and Turkey (females) show decreased readmission rates in line with the healthy migrant effect. Patients from Russia, Serbia, and Turkey (males) show increased readmissions, suggesting that their lower hospitalization rates are more likely due to access barriers. Considering the surge in migration, our findings shed light on healthcare access and usage behaviours across patients with different nationalities, offering new insights and perspectives.
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流动人口的医疗保健使用模式:再入院次数增加表明就医条件较差。全人群回顾性队列研究
平等获得保健服务可确保所有公民,无论其社会经济地位如何,都能获得最佳健康状况,从而建设一个生产力更高、更公平、更有韧性的社会。然而,人们经常发现,流动人口获得医疗服务的机会较少。其原因尚不完全清楚,可能包括语言障碍、缺乏对医疗保健系统的了解以及选择性移民("健康移民 "效应)。我们利用奥地利的大量医疗索赔数据(约 400 万人的 1300 万次住院),比较了奥地利人和非奥地利人的医疗保健使用模式。我们研究了不同国籍的人在初次入院时的主要诊断和住院科室方面的差异。我们假设,与健康状况较差但因就医障碍而住院率较低的移民人群相比,经历了健康移民效应的人群住院后的再入院率较低。我们确实发现,除德国人外,所有民族的住院率都低于奥地利人,德国人的医疗保健使用情况与奥地利人相似。虽然约 20% 的人口有移民背景,但非奥地利公民仅占住院病人的 9.4% 和住院天数的 9.79%。然而,住院率的结果却大相径庭。匈牙利、罗马尼亚和土耳其(女性)等国家的再入院率有所下降,这与健康移民效应相符。而来自俄罗斯、塞尔维亚和土耳其的患者(男性)的再入院率则有所上升,这表明他们较低的住院率更有可能是由于就医障碍造成的。考虑到移民人数的激增,我们的研究结果揭示了不同国籍患者获得和使用医疗服务的行为,为我们提供了新的见解和视角。
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