TY - JOUR
T1 - Material Needs of Emergency Department Patients
T2 - A Systematic Review
AU - Malecha, Patrick W.
AU - Williams, James H.
AU - Kunzler, Nathan M.
AU - Goldfrank, Lewis R.
AU - Alter, Harrison J.
AU - Doran, Kelly M.
N1 - Funding Information:
From the Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital (PWM), Boston, MA; the Department of Emergency Medicine, Harbor–UCLA Medical Center (JHW), Torrance, CA; the Brigham and Women’s/Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine (NMK), Boston, MA; the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Emergency Medicine (LRG, KMD) and the Department of Population Health (KMD), NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY; and the Department of Emergency Medicine, Highland Hospital–Alameda Health System (HJA), Oakland, CA. Received October 18, 2017; revision received December 8, 2017; accepted December 12, 2017. At the time this work was conducted PWM, JHW, and NMK were students at the NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY. Portions of this research were presented at the Population Health Summit IV, New York, NY, December 2016; and at Inventing Social Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference, Dallas, TX, September 2017. No funding was received for this project. Dr. Doran receives support from the NIH/NIDA, the United Hospital Fund, and the Doris Duke Charitable Trust for work unrelated to this project. Author contributions: KMD and NMK conceived of the study; KMD, NMK, and PWM determined the study protocol; NMK, PWM, and JHW conducted the literature search and screening for eligible papers; PWM and JHW extracted study information from eligible papers, supervised, and checked by KMD; PWM, JHW, and KMD drafted the manuscript; LG and HJA contributed to the interpretation of study results and revision of the manuscript for intellectual content. All authors contributed substantially to the revision. PWM and KMD take responsibility for the paper as a whole. Conflicts of interest: PWM, JHW, NMK, LRG, HJA, and KMD report no financial conflicts of interest. HJA serves as the Founding Executive Director and Trustee of the Andrew Levitt Center for Social Emergency Medicine and as the Interim Chair of the American College of Emergency Physicians Social Emergency Medicine Section, all unpaid positions; he reports no financial conflicts of interest. Supervising Editor: Shellie L. Asher,. Address for correspondence and reprints: Kelly M. Doran, MD, MHS; e-mail: [email protected]. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2018;25:330–359.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Background: Interest in social determinants of health (SDOH) has expanded in recent years, driven by a recognition that such factors may influence health outcomes, services use, and health care costs. One subset of SDOH is material needs such as housing and food. We conducted a systematic review of the literature on material needs among emergency department (ED) patients in the United States. Methods: We followed PRISMA guidelines for systematic review methodology. With the assistance of a research librarian, four databases were searched for studies examining material needs among ED patients. Two reviewers independently screened titles, abstracts, and full text to identify eligible articles. Information was abstracted systematically from eligible articles. Results: Forty-three articles were eligible for inclusion. There was heterogeneity in study methods; single-center, cross-sectional studies were most common. Specific material needs examined included homelessness, poverty, housing insecurity, housing quality, food insecurity, unemployment, difficulty paying for health care, and difficulty affording basic expenses. Studies overwhelmingly supported the notion that ED patients have a high prevalence of a number of material needs. Conclusions: Despite some limitations in the individual studies examined in this review, the plurality of prior research confirms that the ED serves a vulnerable population with high rates of material needs. Future research is needed to better understand the role these needs play for ED patients and how to best address them.
AB - Background: Interest in social determinants of health (SDOH) has expanded in recent years, driven by a recognition that such factors may influence health outcomes, services use, and health care costs. One subset of SDOH is material needs such as housing and food. We conducted a systematic review of the literature on material needs among emergency department (ED) patients in the United States. Methods: We followed PRISMA guidelines for systematic review methodology. With the assistance of a research librarian, four databases were searched for studies examining material needs among ED patients. Two reviewers independently screened titles, abstracts, and full text to identify eligible articles. Information was abstracted systematically from eligible articles. Results: Forty-three articles were eligible for inclusion. There was heterogeneity in study methods; single-center, cross-sectional studies were most common. Specific material needs examined included homelessness, poverty, housing insecurity, housing quality, food insecurity, unemployment, difficulty paying for health care, and difficulty affording basic expenses. Studies overwhelmingly supported the notion that ED patients have a high prevalence of a number of material needs. Conclusions: Despite some limitations in the individual studies examined in this review, the plurality of prior research confirms that the ED serves a vulnerable population with high rates of material needs. Future research is needed to better understand the role these needs play for ED patients and how to best address them.
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U2 - 10.1111/acem.13370
DO - 10.1111/acem.13370
M3 - Review article
C2 - 29266523
AN - SCOPUS:85041325888
SN - 1069-6563
VL - 25
SP - 330
EP - 359
JO - Academic Emergency Medicine
JF - Academic Emergency Medicine
IS - 3
ER -