TY - JOUR
T1 - Geographic variation in the demand for emergency care
T2 - A local population-level analysis
AU - Lee, David C.
AU - Doran, Kelly M.
AU - Polsky, Daniel
AU - Cordova, Emmanuel
AU - Carr, Brendan G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/6/1
Y1 - 2016/6/1
N2 - Background: Geographic variation in healthcare has been traditionally studied in large areas such as hospital referral regions or service areas. These analyses are limited by variation that exists within local communities. Materials and methods: Using a New York claims database, we analyzed variation in emergency department use using 35 million visits from 2008 to 2012 among 4797 Census tracts, a smaller unit than usually studied. Using multivariate analysis, we studied associations between population characteristics and proximity to healthcare with rates of emergency department use. We analyzed how factors associated with emergency department utilization differed among urban, suburban, and rural regions. Results: We found significant geographic variation in emergency department use among Census tracts. Public insurance and uninsurance were correlated with high emergency department utilization across all types of regions. We found that race, ethnicity, and poverty were only associated with high emergency department use in urban regions. In suburban and rural regions, a lower proportion of elderly residents and shorter distances to the nearest ED were correlated with high emergency department use. Conclusions: Significant variation in emergency department use exists locally when studied within small geographic areas. Insurance type is significantly associated with variation in emergency department use across urban, suburban, and rural regions, whereas the significance of other factors depended on urbanicity. Implications: Studying geographic variation at a more granular level can lead to better understanding of local population health, drivers of healthcare utilization, and inform targeted interventions. Given heterogeneity in emergency department use by Census tract, policies directed at shaping acute care utilization must consider these local geographic differences.
AB - Background: Geographic variation in healthcare has been traditionally studied in large areas such as hospital referral regions or service areas. These analyses are limited by variation that exists within local communities. Materials and methods: Using a New York claims database, we analyzed variation in emergency department use using 35 million visits from 2008 to 2012 among 4797 Census tracts, a smaller unit than usually studied. Using multivariate analysis, we studied associations between population characteristics and proximity to healthcare with rates of emergency department use. We analyzed how factors associated with emergency department utilization differed among urban, suburban, and rural regions. Results: We found significant geographic variation in emergency department use among Census tracts. Public insurance and uninsurance were correlated with high emergency department utilization across all types of regions. We found that race, ethnicity, and poverty were only associated with high emergency department use in urban regions. In suburban and rural regions, a lower proportion of elderly residents and shorter distances to the nearest ED were correlated with high emergency department use. Conclusions: Significant variation in emergency department use exists locally when studied within small geographic areas. Insurance type is significantly associated with variation in emergency department use across urban, suburban, and rural regions, whereas the significance of other factors depended on urbanicity. Implications: Studying geographic variation at a more granular level can lead to better understanding of local population health, drivers of healthcare utilization, and inform targeted interventions. Given heterogeneity in emergency department use by Census tract, policies directed at shaping acute care utilization must consider these local geographic differences.
KW - Emergency care
KW - GIS
KW - Geographic variation
KW - Population health
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U2 - 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2015.05.003
DO - 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2015.05.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 27343158
AN - SCOPUS:84930707415
SN - 2213-0764
VL - 4
SP - 98
EP - 103
JO - Healthcare
JF - Healthcare
IS - 2
ER -