Abstract

ObjectivesFirst, to test a model of the drivers of frequent emergency department utilization conceptualized as falling within predisposing, enabling, and need dimensions. Second, to extend the model to include social networks and service quality as predictors of frequent utilization. Third, to illustrate the variation in thresholds that define frequent utilization in terms of the number of emergency department encounters by the predictors within the model.Data SourcePrimary data collection over an eight week period within a level-1 trauma urban hospital’s emergency department.Study DesignRepresentative randomized sample of 1,443 adult patients triaged ESI levels 4–5. Physicians and research staff interviewed patients as they received services. Relationships with the outcome variable, utilization, were tested using logistic regression to establish odds-ratios.Principal Findings70.6 percent of patients have two or more, 48.3 percent have three or more, 25.3 percent have four or more, and 14.9 percent have five or more emergency department visits within 12 months. Factors associated with frequent utilization include gender, race, poor mental health, mental health drugs, prescription drug abuse, social networks, employment, perceptions of service quality, seriousness of condition, persistence of condition, and previous hospital admittance.ConclusionsInterventions targeting associated factors will change global emergency department encounters, although the mutability varies. Policy interventions to address predisposing factors such as substance abuse or access to mental health treatment as well as interventions that speak to enabling factors such as promoting the resiliency of social networks may result in decreased frequency of emergency department utilization.

Highlights

  • Context for Frequent UtilizationEstimates are that U.S emergency departments collectively experience 130 million encounters annually indicating nearly 43 visits per 100 persons, the percent of the population that has an emergency department visit each year is less due to the occurrence of frequent and repeated use by a portion of the population [1]

  • The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

  • While a small portion of the population seeks the services of the emergency department on a regular basis, frequent emergency department utilization has been associated with demographic variables such as race [4], gender [5], employment status [6], and age [7,8]

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with cognitive impairments have been noted for frequent utilization [9] as are patients with psychiatric conditions [10,11,12,13,14,15], psychological distress [16,17,18], and depression [19,20,21,22]. This utilization may stem, in part, from the higher prevalence of psychiatric disorders among lower income groups with limited access to mental health care treatment [23].

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