多发病、疾病计数、死亡率和急诊科患者的急救使用:一项横断面数据联系研究。

Chris McParland, Mark A Cooper, David J Lowe, Bethany Stanley, Bridget Johnston
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:在初级保健和普通人群中,多病(两种或两种以上并发慢性疾病)与较差的健康结果和增加的医疗保健利用有关。对于急诊科就诊人员中多病的患病率,或其与该人群预后不良的关系,我们所知甚少。目的:本研究旨在探讨在一个大型城市急诊科就诊的人群中,多病、死亡率和医疗保健利用之间的关系。方法:在2019年4月至2020年3月期间,在苏格兰格拉斯哥急诊科就诊的患者的横截面样本中部署了用于从ICD-10代码中识别28种慢性病的验证算法。对完整病例(n= 63328)进行分析,并与输入缺失值的数据(n= 75723)的结果进行比较。对年龄、性别、贫困和种族进行调整的模型进行拟合,以检验(i)多病、(ii)复杂多病、(iii)疾病计数与以下结果之间的关联:入院、30天和90天再次住院以及入院期间死亡。结果:多病、复杂多病和疾病数与住院率和急诊复诊率显著相关。有1-3种情况的患者住院死亡风险增加。结论:本研究进一步证明了多病和疾病负担对卫生保健使用的影响,并在较小程度上影响死亡率。部署的算法在检测关联方面足够敏感,尽管二级护理数据的访问有限(21个月)。这应该允许构建更强大的模型,以前瞻性地识别类似人群中有不良结果风险的人。
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Multimorbidity, disease count, mortality and emergency care use in persons attending the emergency department: a cross-sectional data-linkage study.

Background: Multimorbidity (two or more concurrent chronic conditions) is associated with poorer health outcomes and increased healthcare utilisation in primary care and general populations. Less is known about the prevalence of multimorbidity in emergency department attenders, or its association with poor outcomes in this population.

Aim: This study sought to explore the relationship between multimorbidity, mortality and health-care utilisation in a large urban cohort of persons attending emergency departments.

Methods: Validated algorithms for the identification of 28 chronic conditions from ICD-10 codes were deployed on a cross-sectional sample of patients attending emergency departments in Glasgow, Scotland between April 2019 and March 2020. Analysis was conducted on complete cases (n=63,328) and compared with results from data with imputed missing values (n=75,723). Models adjusted for age, sex, deprivation and ethnicity were fitted to test for the association between (i) multimorbidity, (ii) complex multimorbidity, (iii) disease count and the following outcomes: admission to hospital, reattendance at 30 and 90 days, and death during admission.

Results: Multimorbidity, complex multimorbidity and disease count were significantly associated with hospital admission and emergency department reattendance. Those with 1-3 conditions were at increased risk of inpatient mortality.

Conclusion: This study further evidences the impact of multimorbidity and disease burden on health-care use, and mortality to a lesser extent. Deployed algorithms were sufficiently sensitive to detect associations, despite limited access (21 months) to secondary-care data. This should allow for the construction of more robust models to prospectively identify persons at risk of poor outcomes in similar populations.

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