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Research ArticleResearch

Proximity and emergency department use

Multilevel analysis using administrative data from patients with cardiovascular risk factors

Patrick Bergeron, Josiane Courteau and Alain Vanasse
Canadian Family Physician August 2015, 61 (8) e391-e397;
Patrick Bergeron
Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Bishop’s University in Sherbrooke, Que.
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Josiane Courteau
Scientific Research Assistant for the Groupe de recherche PRIMUS in Sherbrooke.
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Alain Vanasse
Family physician and Full Professor in the Département de médecine de famille et de médecine d’urgence at the University of Sherbrooke and Director of the Groupe de recherche PRIMUS.
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  • For correspondence: alain.vanasse@usherbrooke.ca
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Abstract

Objective To determine if geographic proximity to an emergency department (ED) is related to ED use in a metropolitan population of patients with cardiovascular risk factors.

Design Population-based, retrospective cohort study.

Setting The census metropolitan area of Montreal, Que.

Participants Cohort of 99 400 patients with diabetes, hypertension, or dyslipidemia in 2007 without a history of cardiovascular disease. Each patient was spatially referred to 1 of 5857 dissemination areas (DAs).

Main outcome measures Annual number of visits to an ED with respect to the distance between the centroid of a patient’s DA and the closest ED, controlling for age, sex, comorbidities, and neighbourhood immigration, social, and material characteristics. Multilevel logistic and negative binomial regressions were used to determine if the proximity to the closest ED was related to ED use, frequent ED use (≥ 4 visits in a year), and number of ED visits.

Results A total of 25 889 (26.0%) patients in the cohort visited an ED at least once during a 1-year period, among which 4563 (4.6%) were frequent users with at least 4 visits. These frequent users were responsible for 28 249 (45.5%) of all 62 021 visits to EDs. The distance between a DA and its closest ED was significantly and negatively correlated with ED use (P < .001), even after controlling for confounding variables. Patients living in a DA close to an ED were also more likely to be frequent users, but the extent of use among them (range from 4 to 82 ED visits) was not related to the distance to the closest ED.

Conclusion These results suggest that patients at risk of cardiovascular disease living in a metropolitan area are more likely to seek a medical encounter at the ED if they live closer to it.

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Canadian Family Physician: 61 (8)
Canadian Family Physician
Vol. 61, Issue 8
1 Aug 2015
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Proximity and emergency department use
Patrick Bergeron, Josiane Courteau, Alain Vanasse
Canadian Family Physician Aug 2015, 61 (8) e391-e397;

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Patrick Bergeron, Josiane Courteau, Alain Vanasse
Canadian Family Physician Aug 2015, 61 (8) e391-e397;
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