Longitudinal study of diabetes prevalence and hospitalisations among care experienced and general population children in Scotland: evidence of an end of care “cliff edge”?

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
M. Allik, A. Leyland, M. Henderson
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Abstract

ObjectivesCare experienced people have poorer health in UK and internationally, but the direction of causation is debated. Using longitudinal cross-sectoral data linkage we explore if inequalities in diabetes prevalence and hospitalisation are present before entering care or develop during or after leaving care. ApproachHealth and social care data were linked for 13,830 care experienced children (CEC) and together with 649,771 general population children (GPC) their prescriptions and hospitalisations were followed from birth between 1990-2004 to study end in 2016. Diabetes prevalence was estimated as at least one prescription   or inpatient hospitalisation for diabetes. We compared hospitalisation percentages and rates in the two cohorts by age and gender. Results from multivariable models adjusted for socioeconomic status, age, gender, care type/length, local authority, and comorbidities will be presented at conference. ResultsDiabetes prevalence was similar in both cohorts and higher in females. However, CEC had twice as many hospitalisations as GPC. Mean hospitalisations were highest among care experienced males (6 compared to 3.6 in females and 2 in GPC). 24% of CEC were hospitalised 3-9 times and 13% 10+ times, for GPC these were 19% and 3% respectively. Hospitalisation rates increase with age in both cohorts, as do differences between cohorts. At ages 0-4 hospitalisation rates are similar, by ages 12-15 CEC have twice as high and at ages 18-27 4-times higher hospitalisation rates. Among CEC, across all ages hospitalisation rates are lower while the child is in care, with the lowest rates in foster care. Hospitalisation rates are highest before entering and after leaving care. ConclusionResults for diabetes hospitalisations suggest that being in care can be good for children’s health. However, a sudden withdrawal of support can create a “cliff edge” and health may deteriorate after leaving care. Data linkage has significant potential to inform policy and practice, including supporting CEC after leaving care.
苏格兰有护理经验的儿童和普通人群儿童糖尿病患病率和住院率的纵向研究:护理“悬崖边缘”结束的证据?
在英国和国际上,有护理经验的人健康状况较差,但因果关系的方向是有争议的。使用纵向跨部门数据链接,我们探索糖尿病患病率和住院治疗的不平等是否在进入护理之前存在,或在离开护理期间或之后发展。研究人员将13830名有护理经验的儿童(CEC)的健康和社会护理数据与649771名普通人群儿童(GPC)的数据联系起来,从1990-2004年出生到2016年研究结束,他们的处方和住院情况被跟踪。糖尿病患病率估计至少有一次处方或住院治疗糖尿病。我们按年龄和性别比较了两组患者的住院率和百分比。对社会经济地位、年龄、性别、护理类型/时间、地方当局和合并症进行调整的多变量模型的结果将在会议上发表。结果两组糖尿病患病率相似,女性患病率较高。然而,CEC的住院人数是GPC的两倍。有护理经验的男性平均住院率最高(6例,女性3.6例,GPC 2例)。24%的CEC患者住院3-9次,13%住院10次以上,GPC患者分别为19%和3%。两组患者的住院率随年龄增长而增加,两组患者之间的差异也是如此。0-4岁儿童的住院率相似,12-15岁儿童的住院率是原来的两倍,18-27岁儿童的住院率是原来的4倍。在CEC中,所有年龄段的儿童在接受照料期间的住院率都较低,其中寄养的住院率最低。入院前和出院后的住院率最高。结论糖尿病住院治疗的结果表明,护理对儿童健康有益。然而,突然停止支持可能会造成“悬崖边缘”,离开护理后健康状况可能会恶化。数据链接具有为政策和实践提供信息的巨大潜力,包括支持离开护理后的CEC。
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
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
386
审稿时长
20 weeks
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