• Am J Public Health · Jan 2000

    The effect of the doctor-patient relationship on emergency department use among the elderly.

    • R A Rosenblatt, G E Wright, L M Baldwin, L Chan, P Clitherow, F M Chen, and L G Hart.
    • Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195-4696, USA. rosenb@u.washington.edu
    • Am J Public Health. 2000 Jan 1;90(1):97-102.

    ObjectivesThis study sought to determine the rate of emergency department use among the elderly and examined whether that use is reduced if the patient has a principal-care physician.MethodsThe Health Care Financing Administration's National Claims History File was used to study emergency department use by Medicare patients older than 65 years in Washington State during 1994.ResultsA total of 18.1% of patients had 1 or more emergency department visits during the study year; the rate increased with age and illness severity. Patients with principal-care physicians were much less likely to use the emergency department for every category of disease severity. After case mix, Medicaid eligibility, and rural/urban residence were controlled for, the odds ratio for having any emergency department visit was 0.47 for patients with a generalist principal-care physician and 0.58 for patients with a specialist principal-care physician.ConclusionsThe rate of emergency department use among the elderly is substantial, and most visits are for serious medical problems. The presence of a continuous relationship with a physician--regardless of specialty--may reduce emergency department use.

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