Addiction Science & Clinical Practice | |
Emergency department use and hospitalizations among homeless adults with substance dependence and mental disorders | |
Adrienne Cheung4  Julian M Somers2  Akm Moniruzzaman2  Michelle Patterson2  Charles J Frankish1  Michael Krausz3  Anita Palepu4  | |
[1] School of Population and Public Health, Vancouver, Canada | |
[2] Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada | |
[3] Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada | |
[4] Department of Medicine, Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, University of British Columbia, 588B-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver V6Z 1Y6, BC, Canada | |
关键词: Mental disorders; At Home study; Homelessness; Substance dependence; Hospital admission; Emergency department use; | |
Others : 1222063 DOI : 10.1186/s13722-015-0038-1 |
|
received in 2014-10-07, accepted in 2015-07-16, 发布年份 2015 | |
【 摘 要 】
Background
Homelessness, substance use, and mental disorders each have been associated with higher rates of emergency department (ED) use and hospitalization. We sought to understand the correlation between ED use, hospital admission, and substance dependence among homeless individuals with concurrent mental illness who participated in a ‘Housing First’ (HF) intervention trial.
Methods
The Vancouver At Home study consisted of two randomized controlled trials addressing homeless individuals with mental disorders who have “high” or “moderate” levels of need. Substance dependence was determined at baseline prior to randomization, using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview diagnostic tool, version 6.0. To assess health service use, we reviewed the number of ED visits and the number of hospital admissions based on administrative data for six urban hospitals. Negative binomial regression modeling was used to test the independent association between substance dependence and health service use (ED use and hospitalization), adjusting for HF intervention, age, gender, ethnicity, education, duration of lifetime homelessness, mental disorders, chronic health conditions, and other variables that were selected a priori to be potentially associated with use of ED services and hospital admission.
Results
Of the 497 homeless adults with mental disorders who were recruited, we included 381 participants in our analyses who had at least 1 year of follow-up and had a personal health number that could be linked to administrative health data. Of this group, 59% (n = 223) met criteria for substance dependence. We found no independent association between substance dependence and ED visits or hospital admissions [rate ratio (RR) = 0.85; 95% CI 0.62–1.17 and RR = 1.21; 95% CI 0.83–1.77, respectively]. The most responsible diagnoses (defined as the diagnosis that accounts for the length of stay) for hospital admissions were schizo-affective disorder, schizophrenia-related disorder, or bipolar affective disorder; collectively reported in 48% (n = 263) of admissions. Fifteen percent (n = 84) of hospital admissions listed substance dependence as the most responsible diagnosis.
Conclusions
Substance dependence was not independently associated with ED use or hospital admission among homeless adults with mental disorders participating in an HF trial. Hospital admissions among this cohort were primarily associated with severe mental disorders.
Trial registration: ISRCTN57595077 and ISRCTN66721740
【 授权许可】
2015 Cheung et al.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
20150805011634799.pdf | 815KB | download |
【 参考文献 】
- [1]Goering P, Tolomiczenko G, Sheldon T, Boydell K, Wasylenki D. Characteristics of persons who are homeless for the first time. Psychiatr Serv. 2002; 53(11):1472-1474.
- [2]Palepu A, Patterson M, Strehlau V, Moniruzzamen A, Tan de Bibiana J, Frankish J et al.. Daily substance use and mental health symptoms among a cohort of homeless adults in Vancouver, British Columbia. J Urban Health. 2013; 90(4):740-746.
- [3]Madianos MG, Chondraki P, Papadimitriou GN. Prevalence of psychiatric disorders among homeless people in Athens area: a cross-sectional study. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2013; 48(8):1225-1234.
- [4]Fazel S, Khosla V, Doll H, Geddes J. The prevalence of mental disorders among the homeless in western countries: systematic review and meta-regression analysis. PLoS Med. 2008; 5(12):e225.
- [5]Vila-Rodriguez F, Panenka WJ, Lang DJ, Thornton AE, Vertinsky T, Wong H et al.. The hotel study: multimorbidity in a community sample living in marginal housing. Am J Psychiatry. 2013; 170(12):1413-1422.
- [6]Chartier M, Carrico AW, Weiser SD, Kushel MB, Riley ED. Specific psychiatric correlates of acute care utilization among unstably housed HIV-positive adults. AIDS Care. 2012; 24(12):1514-1518.
- [7]Culhane DP, Metraux S, Hadley T. Public service reductions associated with placement of homeless persons with severe mental illness in supportive housing. Hous Policy Debate. 2002; 13:107-162.
- [8]Kim TW, Kertesz SG, Horton NJ, Tibbetts N, Samet JH. Episodic homelessness and health care utilization in a prospective cohort of HIV-infected persons with alcohol problems. BMC Health Serv Res. 2006; 6:19. BioMed Central Full Text
- [9]Kushel MB, Vittinghoff E, Haas JS. Factors associated with the health care utilization of homeless persons. JAMA. 2001; 285(2):200-206.
- [10]Kushel MB, Perry S, Bangsberg D, Clark R, Moss AR. Emergency department use among the homeless and marginally housed: results from a community-based study. Am J Public Health. 2002; 92(5):778-784.
- [11]Tsai J, Doran KM, Rosenheck RA. When health insurance is not a factor: national comparison of homeless and nonhomeless US veterans who use Veterans Affairs Emergency Departments. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103 Suppl 2:S225-S231.
- [12]Salit SA, Kuhn EM, Hartz AJ, Vu JM, Mosso AL. Hospitalization costs associated with homelessness in New York City. N Engl J Med. 1998; 338(24):1734-1740.
- [13]Goering PN, Streiner DL, Adair C, Aubry T, Barker J, Distasio J et al.. The At Home/Chez Soi trial protocol: a pragmatic, multi-site, randomised controlled trial of a Housing First intervention for homeless individuals with mental illness in five Canadian cities. BMJ Open. 2011; 1(2):e000323.
- [14]Somers JM, Patterson ML, Moniruzzaman A, Currie L, Rezansoff SN, Palepu A et al.. Vancouver At Home: pragmatic randomized trials investigating Housing First for homeless and mentally ill adults. Trials. 2013; 14:365. BioMed Central Full Text
- [15]Russolillo A, Patterson M, McCandless L, Moniruzzaman A, Somers J. Emergency department utilisation among formerly homeless adults with mental disorders after one year of Housing First interventions: a randomised controlled trial. Int J Hous Policy. 2014; 14(1):79-97.
- [16]Palepu A, Patterson ML, Moniruzzaman A, Frankish CJ, Somers J. Housing first improves residential stability in homeless adults with concurrent substance dependence and mental disorders. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103 Suppl 2:e30-e36.
- [17]Tsemberis S, Gulcur L, Nakae M. Housing First, consumer choice, and harm reduction for homeless individuals with a dual diagnosis. Am J Public Health. 2004; 94(4):651-656.
- [18]Tsai J, Mares AS, Rosenheck RA. A multi-site comparison of supported housing for chronically homeless adults: “Housing first” versus “residential treatment first”. Psychol Serv. 2010; 7(4):219-232.
- [19]Sadowski LS, Kee RA, VanderWeele TJ, Buchanan D. Effect of a housing and case management program on emergency department visits and hospitalizations among chronically ill homeless adults: a randomized trial. JAMA. 2009; 301(17):1771-1778.
- [20]Srebnik D, Connor T, Sylla L. A pilot study of the impact of housing first-supported housing for intensive users of medical hospitalization and sobering services. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103(2):316-321.
- [21]Hwang SW, Gogosis E, Chambers C, Dunn JR, Hoch JS, Aubry T. Health status, quality of life, residential stability, substance use, and health care utilization among adults applying to a supportive housing program. J Urban Health. 2011; 88(6):1076-1090.
- [22]Kessell ER, Bhatia R, Bamberger JD, Kushel MB. Public health care utilization in a cohort of homeless adult applicants to a supportive housing program. J Urban Health. 2006; 83(5):860-873.
- [23]Kertesz SG, Crouch K, Milby JB, Cusimano RE, Schumacher JE. Housing first for homeless persons with active addiction: are we overreaching? Milbank Q. 2009; 87(2):495-534.
- [24]Larimer ME, Malone DK, Garner MD, Atkins DC, Burlingham B, Lonczak HS et al.. Health care and public service use and costs before and after provision of housing for chronically homeless persons with severe alcohol problems. JAMA. 2009; 301(13):1349-1357.
- [25]Edens EL, Mares AS, Rosenheck RA. Chronically homeless women report high rates of substance use problems equivalent to chronically homeless men. Womens Health Issues. 2011; 21(5):383-389.
- [26]Sheehan DV, Lecrubier Y, Sheehan KH, Amorim P, Janavs J, Weiller E et al.. The Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (M.I.N.I.): the development and validation of a structured diagnostic psychiatric interview for DSM-IV and ICD-10. J Clin Psychiatry. 1998; 59 Suppl 20:22-33.
- [27]Barker S, Barron N, McFarland BH, Bigelow DA, Carnahan T. A community ability scale for chronically mentally ill consumers: part II. Applications. Commun Ment Health J. 1994; 30(5):459-472.
- [28]Marsden J, Gossop M, Stewart D, Best D, Farrell M, Lehmann P et al.. The Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP): a brief instrument for assessing treatment outcome. Addiction. 1998; 93(12):1857-1867.
- [29]Shern DL, Wilson NZ, Coen AS, Patrick DC, Foster M, Bartsch DA et al.. Client outcomes II: longitudinal client data from the Colorado treatment outcome study. Milbank Q. 1994; 72(1):123-148.
- [30]Conrad KJ, Yagelka JR, Matters MD, Rich AR, Williams V, Buchanan M. Reliability and validity of a modified Colorado Symptom Index in a national homeless sample. Ment Health Serv Res. 2001; 3(3):141-153.
- [31]Canadian Community Health Survey (2010) http://www23.statcan.gc.ca/imdb/p2SV.pl?Function=getSurvey&SurvId=3226&SurvVer=1&InstaId=15282&InstaVer=7&SDDS=3226&lang=en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2. Accessed 15 May 2015
- [32]National Population Health Survey, Canada (1998–1999) http://www23.statcan.gc.ca/imdb/p2SV.pl?Function=getSurvey&SDDS=5004&lang=en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2. Accessed 15 May 15 2015
- [33]Chambers C, Chiu S, Katic M, Kiss A, Redelmeier DA, Levinson W et al.. High utilizers of emergency health services in a population-based cohort of homeless adults. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103 Suppl 2:S302-S310.
- [34]Hwang SW, Chambers C, Chiu S, Katic M, Kiss A, Redelmeier DA et al.. A comprehensive assessment of health care utilization among homeless adults under a system of universal health insurance. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103 Suppl 2:S294-S301.
- [35]Thakarar K, Morgan JR, Gaeta JM, Hohl C, Drainoni ML. Predictors of frequent emergency room visits among a homeless population. PLoS One. 2015; 10(4):e0124552.
- [36]Martinez TE, Burt MR. Impact of permanent supportive housing on the use of acute care health services by homeless adults. Psychiatr Serv. 2006; 57(7):992-999.
- [37]Tsai J, Rosenheck RA. Risk factors for ED use among homeless veterans. Am J Emerg Med. 2013; 31(5):855-858.
- [38]Ku BS, Scott KC, Kertesz SG, Pitts SR. Factors associated with use of urban emergency departments by the U.S. homeless population. Public Health Rep. 2010; 125(3):398-405.
- [39]Mandelberg JH, Kuhn RE, Kohn MA. Epidemiologic analysis of an urban, public emergency department’s frequent users. Acad Emerg Med. 2000; 7(6):637-646.
- [40]D’Amore J, Hung O, Chiang W, Goldfrank L. The epidemiology of the homeless population and its impact on an urban emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2001; 8(11):1051-1055.
- [41]Glasser I, Zywiak WH. Homelessness and substance misuse: a tale of two cities. Subst Use Misuse. 2003; 38(3–6):551-576.
- [42]van Boekel LC, Brouwers EP, van Weeghel J, Garretsen HF. Stigma among health professionals towards patients with substance use disorders and its consequences for healthcare delivery: systematic review. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2013; 131(1–2):23-35.
- [43]Chambers C, Katic M, Chiu S, Redelmeier DA, Levinson W, Kiss A et al.. Predictors of medical or surgical and psychiatric hospitalizations among a population-based cohort of homeless adults. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103 Suppl 2:S380-S388.
- [44]Schutz C, Linden IA, Torchalla I, Li K, Al-Desouki M, Krausz M. The Burnaby treatment center for mental health and addiction, a novel integrated treatment program for patients with addiction and concurrent disorders: results from a program evaluation. BMC Health Serv Res. 2013; 13:288. BioMed Central Full Text