• J Natl Med Assoc · Oct 2022

    Meta Analysis

    Effect of continuity of care on emergency department and hospital visits for obesity-associated chronic conditions: A federated cohort meta-analysis.

    • Satya Surbhi, Ming Chen, Sohul A Shuvo, Eboni Price-Haywood, Lizheng Shi, Joshua Mann, Yilu Lin, Phi L Le, Jeffrey H Burton, and James E Bailey.
    • Center for Health System Improvement, College of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, 956 Court Ave, Coleman D224 A, Memphis, TN 38163, USA. Electronic address: ssurbhi@uthsc.edu.
    • J Natl Med Assoc. 2022 Oct 1; 114 (5): 525-533.

    BackgroundObesity-associated chronic conditions (OCC) are prevalent in medically underserved areas of the Southern US. Continuity of care with a primary care provider is associated with reduced preventable healthcare utilization, yet little is known regarding the impact of continuity of care among populations with OCC. This study aimed to examine whether continuity of care protects patients living with OCC and the subgroup with type 2 diabetes (OCC+T2D) from emergency department (ED) and hospitalizations, and whether these effects are modified by race and patient residence in health professional shortage areas (HPSA) METHODS: We conducted a retrospective federated cohort meta-analysis of 2015-2018 data from four large practice-based research networks in the Southern U.S. among adult patients with obesity and one more more additional diagnosed OCC. The outcomes included overall and preventable ED visits and hospitalizations. Continuity of care was assessed at the clinic-level using the Bice-Boxerman Continuity of Care Index RESULTS: A total of 111,437 patients with OCC and 47,071 patients with OCC+T2D from the four large practice-based research networks in the South were included in the meta-analysis. Continuity of Care index varied among sites from a mean (SD) of 0.6 (0.4) to 0.9 (0.2). Meta-analysis demonstrated that, regardless of race or residence in HPSA, continuity of care significantly protected OCC patients from preventable ED visits (IRR:0.95; CI:0.92-0.98) and protected OCC+T2D patients from overall ED visits (IRR:0.92; CI:0.85-0.99), preventable ED visits (IRR:0.95; CI:0.91-0.99), and overall hospitalizations (IRR:0.96; CI:0.93-0.98) CONCLUSION: Improving continuity of care may reduce ED and hospital use for patients with OCC and particularly those with OCC+T2D.Copyright © 2022 National Medical Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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