急诊科食品不安全筛查、食品券分配和使用:一项前瞻性队列研究。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Alexander J Ulintz, Seema S Patel, Katherine Anderson, Kevin Walters, Tyler J Stepsis, Michael S Lyons, Peter S Pang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:食品不安全是急诊科(ED)患者普遍存在的社会风险。可能受益于粮食不安全资源的患者可以通过基于ed的筛查来识别;然而,许多患者在出院后难以获得资源。在急诊科内或附近安置资源可能会提高患者的利用率,但这种方法在很大程度上尚未得到研究。本研究的特点是接受和使用的食品券,可在医院食品市场兑换的病人筛选阳性的食品不安全在他们的急诊科访问。方法:这项前瞻性队列研究在一个县资助的急诊科进行,纳入了2022年7月至10月工作日上午8点至晚上8点就诊并同意参与研究的连续成年患者。我们排除了到达时需要复苏或不能提供英文书面知情同意书的患者。研究参与者完成了由研究人员管理的两题饥饿生命体征筛查工具的纸质版本。筛查呈阳性的参与者收到一张唯一编号的30美元食品券,可在医院的食品市场兑换。通过每隔30天定期评估市场收货记录,量化代金券兑换情况。主要结果是兑换券的比例。次要结局包括食品不安全筛查呈阳性的参与者比例、接受代金券的参与者比例和相关的描述性统计数据。结果:在396名符合条件的个体中,377人(95.2%)同意并完成了食品不安全筛查。大多数为中年人(中位53岁,四分位数范围30-58岁),女性191例(50.4%),黑人242例(63.9%),非西班牙裔343例(91.0%)。在参与者中,228人(60.2%)的食品不安全筛查呈阳性,224人(98.2%)获得了代金券,其中86人(38.4%)在急诊室就诊后的中位数9天内获得了代金券。结论:高比例的参与者对粮食不安全筛查呈阳性并接受食品券;然而,不到一半的代金券是在同一地点的食品市场兑换的。这些结果表明,为解决粮食不安全问题而分配ED食品券是可行的,但仅将资源放在同一地点可能不足以解决社会风险,并暗示在基于ED的社会需求筛选之后,对资源利用的促进因素和障碍的理解有限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emergency Department Food Insecurity Screening, Food Voucher Distribution and Utilization: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Objective: Food insecurity is a prevalent social risk among emergency department (ED) patients. Patients who may benefit from food insecurity resources may be identified via ED-based screening; however, many patients experience difficulty accessing resources after discharge. Co-locating resources in or near the ED may improve utilization by patients, but this approach remains largely unstudied. This study characterized the acceptance and use of a food voucher redeemable at a hospital food market for patients who screened positive for food insecurity during their ED visit.

Methods: This prospective cohort study, conducted at a single county-funded ED, included consecutive adult patients who presented on weekdays between 8 AM-8 PM from July-October 2022 and consented to research participation. We excluded patients who required resuscitation on arrival or could not provide written informed consent in English. Study participants completed a paper version of the two-question Hunger Vital Sign screening tool, administered by research staff. Participants who screened positive received a uniquely numbered $30 food voucher redeemable at the hospital's co-located food market. Voucher redemption was quantified through regular evaluation of market receipt records at 30-day intervals. The primary outcome was the proportion of redeemed vouchers. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of participants screening positive for food insecurity, proportion of participants accepting vouchers, and associated descriptive statistics.

Results: Of the 396 eligible individuals approached, 377 (95.2%) consented and completed food insecurity screening. Most were middle-aged (median 53 years, interquartile range 30-58 years), 191 were female (50.4%), 242 were Black (63.9%), and 343 were non-Hispanic (91.0%). Of the participants, 228 (60.2%) screened positive for food insecurity and 224 received vouchers (98.2%), of which 86 were redeemed (38.4%) a median of nine days after the ED visit.

Conclusion: A high proportion of participants screened positive for food insecurity and accepted food vouchers; however, less than half of all vouchers were redeemed at the co-located food market. These results imply ED food voucher distribution for food insecurity is feasible, but co-location of resources alone may be insufficient in addressing the social risk and alludes to a limited understanding of facilitators and barriers to resource utilization following ED-based social needs screening.

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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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