酒精消费对受伤患者急诊室服务使用的影响:一项跨国急诊室研究。

Cheryl J Cherpitel, Yu Ye, Jason Bond, Jürgen Rehm, Mariana Cremonte, Otilia Neves, Jacek Moskalewicz, Grazyna Swiatkiewicz, Norman Giesbrecht
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引用次数: 31

摘要

目的:尽管与普通人群相比,急诊科(ED)的受伤患者报告更频繁地使用ED,并且发现与酒精相关的入院和慢性酒精滥用可预测未来的ED入院,但这些数据仅基于美国的少数研究。这篇文章的目的是探讨酒精的使用和急诊服务的使用在受伤患者中跨国家的关系。方法:采用二项和多项logistic回归分析了在14个国家的37个急诊科调查的9743名受伤患者的酒精摄入与急诊就诊的关系,并报告了来自急诊室协同酒精分析项目(ERCAAP)和世界卫生组织酒精与损伤联合研究的23项研究。结果:受伤前6小时内饮酒与近12个月内ED就诊相关(优势比= 1.25,p < 0.05),呈正剂量反应关系。重度饮酒者和依赖酒精的饮酒者也更有可能报告多次急诊就诊,这反映了服务使用负担的增加。在ED水平上,对酒精使用的污名化是唯一能够持续预测饮酒与ED使用之间关系的跨ED变化的重要背景变量,其中在不太接受酒精使用的地区,这种关联较弱。结论:本研究进一步支持在急诊科受伤患者中筛查急性和慢性酒精使用的潜在有效性,以减少急诊科服务的使用和相关费用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of alcohol consumption on emergency department services use among injured patients: A cross-national emergency room study.

Objective: Although injured patients in the emergency department (ED) report more frequent use of the ED compared with the general population, and alcohol-related admissions and chronic alcohol misuse have been found to be predictive of future ED admissions, these data are based on only a few U.S. studies. The purpose of this article was to explore the association of alcohol use and ED services use among injured patients cross-nationally.

Method: Binary and multinomial logistic regression were used to analyze the association of alcohol consumption with prior ED visits among 9,743 injured patients surveyed in 37 EDs in 14 countries and reported in 23 studies from the combined Emergency Room Collaborative Alcohol Analysis Project (ERCAAP) and World Health Organization Collaborative Study of Alcohol and Injuries.

Results: Drinking within 6 hours before injury was associated with prior ED visits during the last 12 months (odds ratio = 1.25, p < .05), with a positive dose-response relationship. Heavy drinkers and those drinkers who were alcohol-dependent were also significantly more likely to report multiple prior ED visits, reflecting an elevated burden of services use. At the ED level, stigmatization of alcohol use was the only significant contextual variable that consistently predicted cross-ED variation in the relationship between drinking and ED use, in which the association was weaker in areas where alcohol use is less accepted.

Conclusions: This study lends additional support to the potential effectiveness of screening for acute and chronic alcohol use among ED injured patients to reduce ED services use and associated costs.

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