Food and housing insecurity, adverse childhood experiences, and pediatric emergency department use

Raymen R. Assaf , Theodore Heyming , Tricia Morphew , Kellie Bacon , Shelby Shelton , Jason A. Douglas
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Abstract

Objective

To describe the relationship between neighborhood-level repression-adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) (family member incarceration, community violence, discrimination), food and housing insecurity, and pediatric emergency department (ED) utilization.

Methods

The measured exposures were food/housing insecurity, repression-ACEs, and childhood opportunity index (COI 3.0) based on caregiver/patient surveys and home address. The primary outcome was ED visits 12 months before and after the ED index visit. Multivariable regression models examined associations between the exposures and annual ED visit rates per 100 patients, adjusting for potential confounders.

Results

From March 2021 - May 2023 6228 patients (range 0–22 years) had an index ED visit. 64.9 % were Hispanic, 7.0 % Asian, 1.9 % Black, 7.0 % Other/multiple races, and 19.1 % White. Of the participants, 11.6 % had a repression-ACE; 22.3 % food or housing insecurity, and average COI was moderate (53.3, SD = 23.8). Food and housing insecurity were higher among Black (29.0 %) and Hispanic (26.3 %) participants (p < 0.001). Very low to moderate COI was highest in Black (51.3 %) and Hispanic (77.4 %) participants (p < 0.001). Black participants reported the highest repression-ACEs (25.6 %, p < 0.001). In univariate analyses, food insecurity (RR = 1.12, p = 0.07) and housing insecurity (RR = 1.13, p = 0.04) increased the ED visit rate. Experiencing discrimination increased this rate by 27 %, (RR = 1.27, p = 0.02). The effect of violence exposure (p = 0.03) and family member incarceration (p = 0.07) on ED visit rate varied across racial groups.

Conclusions

Repression-ACEs interact with race and ethnicity and social inequities (food/housing insecurity, COI) in shaping ED utilization. Impacts of ACEs on children’s health continue to shape inequities in pediatrics while defining areas for action.
食物和住房不安全,不良的童年经历,和儿科急诊科使用
目的探讨社区压抑不良童年经历(ace)(家庭成员监禁、社区暴力、歧视)、食物和住房不安全感与儿科急诊科(ED)使用率之间的关系。方法根据照顾者/患者调查和家庭住址,测量食物/住房不安全感、压抑- ace和童年机会指数(COI 3.0)。主要结局是ED指数访视前后12个月的ED访视。多变量回归模型检验了暴露与每100名患者每年ED就诊率之间的关系,并对潜在的混杂因素进行了调整。结果从2021年3月至2023年5月,6228例患者(年龄0-22岁)进行了指数ED就诊。64.9%为西班牙裔,7.0%为亚洲人,1.9%为黑人,7.0%为其他/多种族,19.1%为白人。在参与者中,11.6%患有抑制性ace;22.3%为食物或住房不安全,平均COI为中等(53.3,SD = 23.8)。黑人(29.0%)和西班牙裔(26.3%)参与者的食物和住房不安全感更高(p <;0.001)。极低至中度COI在黑人(51.3%)和西班牙裔(77.4%)参与者中最高(p <;0.001)。黑人参与者报告了最高的压抑- ace (25.6%, p <;0.001)。在单变量分析中,食品不安全(RR = 1.12, p = 0.07)和住房不安全(RR = 1.13, p = 0.04)增加了急诊科就诊率。遭受歧视使这一比率增加了27% (RR = 1.27, p = 0.02)。暴力暴露(p = 0.03)和家庭成员监禁(p = 0.07)对急诊科就诊率的影响在不同种族之间存在差异。结论压抑性ace与种族、民族和社会不平等(食物/住房不安全,COI)相互作用,影响ED的利用。ace对儿童健康的影响在确定行动领域的同时,继续形成儿科的不平等现象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global pediatrics
Global pediatrics Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health
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