Cold-related injuries among patients experiencing homelessness in Toronto: a descriptive analysis of emergency department visits.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1007/s43678-023-00546-7
Lucie Richard, Haley Golding, Refik Saskin, Jesse I R Jenkinson, Katherine Francombe Pridham, Evie Gogosis, Carolyn Snider, Stephen W Hwang
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose: Homelessness increases the risk of cold-related injuries. We examined emergency department visits for cold-related injuries in Toronto over a 4-year period, comparing visits for patients identified as homeless to visits for patients not identified as homeless.

Methods: This descriptive analysis of visits to emergency departments in Toronto between July 2018 and June 2022 used linked health administrative data. We measured emergency department visits with cold-related injury diagnoses among patients experiencing homelessness and those not identified as homeless. Rates were expressed as a number of visits for cold-related injury per 100,000 visits overall. Rate ratios were used to compare rates between homeless vs. not homeless groups.

Results: We identified 333 visits for cold-related injuries among patients experiencing homelessness and 1126 visits among non-homeless patients. In each of the 4 years of observation, rate ratios ranged between 13.6 and 17.6 for cold-related injuries overall, 13.7 and 17.8 for hypothermia, and 10.3 and 18.3 for frostbite. Rates per 100,000 visits in the fourth year (July 2021 to June 2022) were significantly higher than in the pre-pandemic period. Male patients had higher rates, regardless of homelessness status; female patients experiencing homelessness had higher rate ratios than male patients experiencing homelessness.

Conclusion: Patients experiencing homelessness visiting the emergency department are much more likely to be seen for cold-related injuries than non-homeless patients. Additional efforts are needed to prevent cold-related exposure and consequent injury among people experiencing homelessness.

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在多伦多经历无家可归的病人中与寒冷相关的伤害:对急诊科访问的描述性分析。
目的:无家可归增加了感冒相关伤害的风险。我们检查了多伦多4年期间因感冒相关伤害的急诊科就诊情况,比较了被确定为无家可归的患者和未被确定为无家可归的患者的就诊情况。方法:对2018年7月至2022年6月期间多伦多急诊科的就诊情况进行描述性分析,使用相关的卫生管理数据。我们测量了无家可归和未被确定为无家可归的患者中与感冒相关的损伤诊断的急诊就诊情况。比率表示为每10万次访问中与感冒有关的伤害的访问次数。比率比率用于比较无家可归者和非无家可归者群体之间的比率。结果:我们在无家可归的患者中确定了333次与感冒相关的伤害就诊,在非无家可归的患者中确定了1126次就诊。在4年的观察中,与寒冷相关的损伤的发生率在13.6 - 17.6之间,低温的发生率在13.7 - 17.8之间,冻伤的发生率在10.3 - 18.3之间。第四年(2021年7月至2022年6月)每10万次就诊的比率显著高于大流行前时期。无论无家可归状况如何,男性患者的发病率更高;无家可归的女性患者的比例高于无家可归的男性患者。结论:与非无家可归的患者相比,无家可归的患者到急诊室就诊的可能性更大。需要作出更多努力,防止无家可归者遭受与寒冷有关的暴露和由此造成的伤害。
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
Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine
Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
171
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: CJEM is a peer-reviewed journal owned by CAEP. CJEM is published every 2 months (January, March, May, July, September and November). CJEM presents articles of interest to emergency care providers in rural, urban or academic settings. Publishing services are provided by the Canadian Medical Association.
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