PEDIATRICS Vol. 98 No. 1 July 1996, pp. 28-34
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Routine Emergency Department Use for Sick Care by Children in the United States

Neal Halfon MD, MPH1, Paul W. Newacheck DrPH2, David L. Wood MD, MPH3, and Robert F. St Peter MD4

1 Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Department of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of california Los Angeles; RAND Corporation, Santa Monica
2 Institute for Health Policy Studies, School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco
3 RAND Corporation, Santa Monica; Ahmanson Department of Pediatrics, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles
4 Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. Washington, DC

Background. The use of the emergency departments as a regular source of sick care has been increasing, despite the fact that it is costly and is often an inappropriate source of care. This study examines factors associated with routine use of emergency departments by using a national sample of US children.

Methods. Data from the 1988 National Health Interview Survey on Child Health, a nationally representative sample of 17 710 children younger than 18 years, was linked to county-level health resource data from the Area Resource File. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess the association between children's use of emergency departments as their usual sources of sick care and predisposing need and enabling characteristics of the families, as well as availability of health resources in their communities.

Results. In 1988 3.4% or approximately 2 million US children younger than 18 years were reported to use emergency departments as their usual sources of sick care. Significant demographic risk factors for reporting an emergency department as a usual source of sick care included black versus white race (odds ratio [OR], 2.08), single-parent versus two-parent families (OR, 1.53), mothers with less than a high school education versus those with high school or more (OR, 1.76), poor versus nonpoor families (OR, 1.76), and living in an urban versus suburban setting (OR, 1.38). Specific indicators of need, such as recurrent health conditions (asthma, tonsillitis, headaches, and febrile seizures), were not associated with routine use of emergency departments for sick care. Furthermore, health insurance status and specifically Medicaid coverage had no association with use of the emergency department as a usual source of sick care. Compared with children who receive well child care in private physicians' offices or health maintenance organizations, children whose sources of well child care were neighborhood health centers were more likely to report emergency departments for sick care (OR, 2.01). Children residing in counties where the supply of primary care physicians was in the top quintile had half the odds (OR, 0.50) of reporting emergency departments as usual sources of sick care.

Submitted on February 20, 1995
Accepted on July 24, 1995




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