
@article{ref1,
title="Socioeconomic deprivation and accident and emergency attendances: cross-sectional analysis of general practices in England",
journal="British journal of general practice",
year="2015",
author="Scantlebury, Rachel and Rowlands, Gillian and Durbaba, Stevo and Schofield, Peter and Sidhu, Kalwant and Ashworth, Mark",
volume="65",
number="639",
pages="e649-54",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Demand for England's accident and emergency (A&E) services is increasing and is particularly concentrated in areas of high deprivation. The extent to which primary care services, relative to population characteristics, can impact on A&E is not fully understood. <br><br>AIM: To conduct a detailed analysis to identify population and primary care characteristics associated with A&E attendance rates, particularly those that may be amenable to change by primary care services. DESIGN AND SETTING: This study used a cross-sectional population-based design. The setting was general practices in England, in the year 2011-2012. <br><br>METHOD: Multivariate linear regression analysis was used to create a model to explain the variability in practice A&E attendance rates. Predictor variables included population demographics, practice characteristics, and measures of patient experiences of primary care. <br><br>RESULTS: The strongest predictor of general practice A&E attendance rates was social deprivation: the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD-2010) (β = 0.3. B = 1.4 [95% CI =1.3 to 1.6]), followed by population morbidity (GPPS responders reporting a long-standing health condition) (β = 0.2, B = 231.5 [95% CI = 202.1 to 260.8]), and knowledge of how to contact an out-of-hours GP (GPPS question 36) (β = -0.2, B = -128.7 [95% CI =149.3 to -108.2]). Other significant predictors included the practice list size (β = -0.1, B = -0.002 [95% CI = -0.003 to -0.002]) and the proportion of patients aged 0-4 years (β = 0.1, B = 547.3 [95% CI = 418.6 to 676.0]). The final model explained 34.4% of the variation in A&E attendance rates, mostly due to factors that could not be modified by primary care services. <br><br>CONCLUSION: Demographic characteristics were the strongest predictors of A&E attendance rates. Primary care variables that may be amenable to change only made a small contribution to higher A&E attendance rates.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0960-1643",
doi="10.3399/bjgp15X686893",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/bjgp15X686893"
}