Hospital utilization by older and younger patients in Canada: pre-pandemic findings.

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Journal of Public Health Policy Pub Date : 2024-09-26 DOI:10.1057/s41271-024-00520-2
Donna M Wilson, Yiling Zhou, Sarah Bolaji-Osagie, Farrell M Bryenton, Qinqin Dou, Gail Low
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Abstract

Many countries are experiencing a post-pandemic surge in hospital utilization along with accelerating population aging. Maximal hospital efficiency is required, with utilization evidence essential for identifying appropriate hospital or broader health system reforms. We offer an investigation of the most recent pre-COVID year (2019-2020) of complete population-based hospital utilization data to describe and compare the use of hospitals by older (65+) and younger (0-64) people admitted for inpatient services in Canada. We found that 35.7% of all 1,888,133 admitted individuals and 39.8% of all 2,543,227 hospital episodes involved people aged 65+, representing 4,963,766 or 17.1% of the study population. This study, as do previous Canadian and other ones, found hospitals admit more younger people than older people. The admission and care patterns of both younger and older patients reveal a need for more community-based services to shorten older patient hospitalizations and prevent avoidable hospitalizations by both younger and older people.

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加拿大老年病人和年轻病人使用医院的情况:大流行前的调查结果。
随着人口老龄化的加速,许多国家的医院使用率在大流行病后急剧上升。需要最大限度地提高医院效率,而利用率证据对于确定适当的医院或更广泛的医疗系统改革至关重要。我们对 COVID 前最近一年(2019-2020 年)基于人口的完整医院使用数据进行了调查,以描述和比较加拿大老年人(65 岁以上)和年轻人(0-64 岁)住院服务的医院使用情况。我们发现,在所有 1,888,133 名入院患者中,有 35.7% 的患者为 65 岁以上的老年人,在所有 2,543,227 次住院治疗中,有 39.8% 的患者为 65 岁以上的老年人,占研究人口的 4,963,766 人或 17.1%。这项研究与之前的加拿大研究和其他研究一样,发现医院收治的年轻人多于老年人。年轻患者和老年患者的入院和护理模式表明,需要更多基于社区的服务,以缩短老年患者的住院时间,并防止年轻患者和老年患者出现可避免的住院治疗。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Health Policy
Journal of Public Health Policy 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
62
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Public Health Policy (JPHP) will continue its 35 year tradition: an accessible source of scholarly articles on the epidemiologic and social foundations of public health policy, rigorously edited, and progressive. JPHP aims to create a more inclusive public health policy dialogue, within nations and among them. It broadens public health policy debates beyond the ''health system'' to examine all forces and environments that impinge on the health of populations. It provides an exciting platform for airing controversy and framing policy debates - honing policies to solve new problems and unresolved old ones. JPHP welcomes unsolicited original scientific and policy contributions on all public health topics. New authors are particularly encouraged to enter debates about how to improve the health of populations and reduce health disparities.
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