Medical care
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Comparative Study
Care-seeking patterns of inner-city families using an emergency room. A three-decade comparison.
Since World War II, the urban hospital emergency room has been a major source of medical care for inner-city poor families, many of whom receive Medicaid. Given the expensive and episodic nature of emergency room care, there has been renewed interest in enrolling Medicaid recipients into managed care plans to increase access to care and to reduce medical costs. Thus, the primary care physician, in many managed care plans, is expected to give prior approval for emergency room care in nonurgent situations. The goals of managed care may create tension between its requirements and historical patterns of inner-city families seeking care in an emergency room. In 1964, Alpert developed a typology that categorized inner-city families' patterns of seeking medical care in a pediatric emergency department (PED) by describing the relation between regular source of medical care and reliance on this source before the PED visit. In 1976, using the same typology, Alpert and Scherzer updated care-seeking patterns in Boston after the introduction of neighborhood health centers (NHCs) and Medicaid. In 1993, the typology is a method that can be used to assess the impact of managed care on PED utilization by inner-city families. This article compares the 1993 pattern of seeking PED care with that measured in 1964 and 1976. ⋯ Efforts to provide access to care through Medicaid, NHCs, and hospital-based primary care resulted in a greater percentage of families reporting a regular source of care; however, a majority of families continue to exhibit an uncoordinated pattern of seeking care. More families in 1993 did not contact their regular source before seeking care in the PED when compared with 1964 and 1976. For managed care plans to increase access and reduce costs, a shift in PED utilization patterns remains necessary. The primary care system must have the capacity to accommodate these changes and considerable patient education must occur if urgent care is to be provided outside the PED.
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The authors determine whether assessments of effects of rural emergency medical service (EMS) system characteristics on trauma outcomes (using patient-level data) are significantly biased if the Injury Severity Score (ISS) is not available. ⋯ In rural settings, where a patient's ISS generally is not available, studies of rural EMS system characteristics and trauma outcomes may use RTS, patient age, and type of trauma to control for expected survival. The patient's ISS does not appear to be essential, at least for the rural area analyzed in this study.