• Health reports · Dec 2017

    Hospitalization for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among urban Métis adults.

    • Gisèle M Carrière, Mohan B Kumar, and Claudia Sanmartin.
    • Health Analysis Division, Statistics Canada.
    • Health Rep. 2017 Dec 20; 28 (12): 3-11.

    BackgroundHospitalizations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs) are potentially preventable, but may be required if these conditions are not managed well. National-level information about ACSC hospitalizations is available for Canada, but not for Aboriginal groups. This study describes ACSC hospitalizations among urban Métis adults relative to their non-Aboriginal counterparts.Data And MethodsThe 2006/2007-to-2008/2009 Discharge Abstract Database, which contains hospitalization records from all acute care facilities (excluding Quebec), was linked to the 2006 Census to obtain Aboriginal identity information. Age-standardized ACSC hospitalization rates (ASHRs) per 100,000 population and rate ratios were calculated for Métis aged 18 to 74 relative to non-Aboriginal people of the same ages. Odds of ACSC hospitalizations were estimated using logistic regression models, adjusting for demographic, geographic, and socioeconomic characteristics.ResultsThe ASHR for ACSCs among urban Métis adults was twice that among non-Aboriginal adults (393 versus 184 per 100,000 population). Even when demographic, geographic, and socioeconomic characteristics were taken into account, Métis had higher odds of ACSC hospitalizations overall (OR 1.5). Most commonly, these hospitalizations were for diabetes (OR 1.8) or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (OR 1.5). Modelled factors partly reduced differences between Métis and non-Aboriginal adults, but variations between the groups remained after all adjustments.InterpretationRates of ACSC hospitalizations were higher among Métis than among non-Aboriginal adults who lived in urban areas. Further research using other data sources is warranted to assess the roles of factors not available for this analysis, such as primary care, co-morbidity, and health behaviours.

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