Neighbourhood socioeconomic conditions and emergency admissions for ambulatory care sensitive conditions in children: a longitudinal ecological analysis in England, 2012-2017.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS BMJ Paediatrics Open Pub Date : 2025-01-19 DOI:10.1136/bmjpo-2024-002991
Courtney Franklin, Kate Mason, Lateef Akanni, Konstantinos Daras, Tanith Rose, Bernie Carter, Enitan D Carrol, David Taylor-Robinson
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Abstract

Background: Ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs) are those for which hospital admission could be prevented by interventions in primary care. Children living in socioeconomic disadvantage have higher rates of emergency admissions for ACSCs than their more affluent counterparts. Emergency admissions for ACSCs have been increasing, but few studies have assessed how changing socioeconomic conditions (SECs) have impacted this. This study investigates the association between local SECs and emergency ACS hospital admissions in children in England.

Methods: We examined longitudinal trends in emergency admission rates for ACSCs and investigate the association between local SECs and these admissions in children over time in England, using time-varying neighbourhood unemployment as a proxy for SECs. Fixed-effect regression models assessed the relationship between changes in neighbourhood unemployment and admission rates, controlling for unmeasured time-invariant confounding of each neighbourhood. We also explore the extent to which this relationship differs by acute and chronic ACSCs and is explained by access to primary and secondary care.

Results: Between 2012 and 2017, paediatric emergency admissions for acute ACSCs increased, while admissions for chronic ACSCs decreased. At the neighbourhood level, each 1% point increase in unemployment was associated with a 3.9% and 2.7% increase in the rate of emergency admissions for acute ACSCs, for children aged 0-9 years and 10-19 years, respectively. A 2.6% increase in admission rates for chronic ACSCs was observed, driven by an association in 0-9 years old. Adjustment for primary and secondary care access did not meaningfully attenuate the magnitude of this association.

Conclusions: Increasing trends in neighbourhood unemployment were associated with increases in paediatric emergency admission rates for ACSCs in England. This was not explained by available measures of differential access to care, suggesting policy interventions should address the causes of unemployment and poverty in addition to health system factors to reduce emergency admissions for ACSCs.

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邻里社会经济条件与儿童门诊敏感条件急诊入院:英格兰纵向生态学分析,2012-2017。
背景:门诊护理敏感条件(ACSCs)是指那些可以通过初级保健干预措施预防住院的情况。生活在社会经济不利条件下的儿童在acsc的紧急入院率高于较富裕的儿童。acsc的紧急入院人数一直在增加,但很少有研究评估不断变化的社会经济条件(SECs)如何影响这一点。本研究调查了英格兰地区儿童急性冠脉综合征(ACS)与当地儿童急性冠脉综合征住院之间的关系。方法:我们研究了acsc紧急入院率的纵向趋势,并调查了英格兰当地SECs与这些儿童入院率之间的关系,使用随时间变化的社区失业率作为SECs的代理。固定效应回归模型评估了社区失业率变化与入学率之间的关系,控制了每个社区未测量的时不变混淆。我们还探讨了急性和慢性ACSCs之间这种关系的差异程度,并通过获得初级和二级保健来解释。结果:2012年至2017年期间,急性ACSCs的儿科急诊入院人数增加,而慢性ACSCs的入院人数减少。在社区一级,失业率每增加1%,0-9岁儿童和10-19岁儿童的急性acsc急诊入院率分别增加3.9%和2.7%。观察到慢性ACSCs的入院率增加了2.6%,这是由0-9岁儿童的关联所驱动的。调整初级和二级保健的可及性并没有显著地减弱这种关联的程度。结论:在英格兰,社区失业率的上升趋势与acsc儿科急诊入院率的上升有关。这不能用现有的差别获得护理的措施来解释,这表明除了卫生系统因素外,政策干预还应解决失业和贫困的原因,以减少acsc的急诊入院。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Paediatrics Open
BMJ Paediatrics Open Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
124
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