PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS INFLUENCING NONURGENT USE OF THE EMERGENCY ROOM - A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR RESEARCH AND IMPROVED SERVICE DELIVERY

被引:165
作者
PADGETT, DK [1 ]
BRODSKY, B [1 ]
机构
[1] NEW SCH SOCIAL RES, DEPT PSYCHOL, NEW YORK, NY 10003 USA
关键词
EMERGENCY ROOM USE; PSYCHOSOCIAL; HELP-SEEKING BEHAVIOR; HEALTH POLICY;
D O I
10.1016/0277-9536(92)90231-E
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Despite dramatic increases in use of hospital emergency rooms (ERs) since the 1950s, an estimated 85% of ER visits are made for non-life-threatening reasons. Using a modified version of the Andersen and Newman model of health care utilization, this paper reviews the research literature on ER use to examine what is known about factors that influence three stages of the help-seeking process: (1) problem recognition; (2) the decision to seek help; (3) the decision to use the ER. While predisposing factors other than race are not generally significant, enabling factors such as income, insurance coverage, having a usual source of care, and geographic proximity affect use of the ER, both alone and in interaction with race and other factors. The most common reason for non-urgent ER use was 'other care not available'. In addition to the absence of primary r-are, non-urgent use of the ER is linked to need factors arising from socioeconomic stress, psychiatric co-morbidities, and a lack of social support. Recommendations for future studies include examining prospectively all 3 stages of decision-making leading to ER use, and considering interactive effects among predictors. Implications for service delivery are discussed, including the need to re-structure health care delivery systems to provide greater access to primary care and provide more attention to psychosocial aspects of patient care in clinical settings.
引用
收藏
页码:1189 / 1197
页数:9
相关论文
共 71 条
[1]   SOCIETAL AND INDIVIDUAL DETERMINANTS OF MEDICAL CARE UTILIZATION IN UNITED-STATES [J].
ANDERSEN, R ;
NEWMAN, JF .
MILBANK MEMORIAL FUND QUARTERLY-HEALTH AND SOCIETY, 1973, 51 (01) :95-124
[2]   AN ECOLOGICAL STUDY OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN RISK INDICATORS FOR SOCIAL DISINTEGRATION AND USE OF A SOMATIC EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT [J].
ANDREN, KG ;
ROSENQVIST, U .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1987, 25 (10) :1121-1127
[3]   HEAVY USERS OF AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT - PSYCHO-SOCIAL AND MEDICAL CHARACTERISTICS, OTHER HEALTH-CARE CONTACTS AND THE EFFECT OF A HOSPITAL SOCIAL-WORKER INTERVENTION [J].
ANDREN, KG ;
ROSENQVIST, U .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1985, 21 (07) :761-770
[4]   HEAVY USERS OF AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT - A 2 YEAR FOLLOW-UP-STUDY [J].
ANDREN, KG ;
ROSENQVIST, U .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1987, 25 (07) :825-831
[5]   A STUDY OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SOCIAL NETWORK, PERCEIVED ILL HEALTH AND UTILIZATION OF EMERGENCY CARE - A CASE CONTROL STUDY [J].
ANDREN, KG .
SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL MEDICINE, 1988, 16 (02) :87-93
[6]   MEDICAL AND PSYCHIATRIC DETERMINANTS OF OUTPATIENT MEDICAL UTILIZATION [J].
BARSKY, AJ ;
WYSHAK, G ;
KLERMAN, GL .
MEDICAL CARE, 1986, 24 (06) :548-560
[7]  
BASSUK EL, 1983, AM J PSYCHIAT, V140, P539
[8]   SOCIO-SPATIAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE UTILIZATION OF EMERGENCY HOSPITAL SERVICES IN 2 URBAN TERRITORIES IN QUEBEC [J].
BELAND, F ;
PHILIBERT, L ;
THOUEZ, JP ;
MAHEUX, B .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1990, 30 (01) :53-66
[9]   PSYCHIATRIC SCREENING OF ADMISSIONS TO AN ACCIDENT AND EMERGENCY WARD [J].
BELL, G ;
REINSTEIN, DZ ;
RAJIYAH, G ;
ROSSER, R .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 1991, 158 :554-557
[10]   EMERGENCY CLINIC - A STUDY OF ITS ROLE IN A TEACHING HOSPITAL [J].
BERGMAN, AB ;
HAGGERTY, RJ .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DISEASES OF CHILDREN, 1962, 104 (01) :36-&