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A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries

BACKGROUND: Hospitalisation for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSHs) has become a recognised tool to measure access to primary care. Timely and effective outpatient care is highly relevant to refugee populations given the past exposure to torture and trauma, and poor access to adequate healt...

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Autores principales: Correa-Velez, Ignacio, Ansari, Zahid, Sundararajan, Vijaya, Brown, Kaye, Gifford, Sandra M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2082011/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17910776
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-5-9
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author Correa-Velez, Ignacio
Ansari, Zahid
Sundararajan, Vijaya
Brown, Kaye
Gifford, Sandra M
author_facet Correa-Velez, Ignacio
Ansari, Zahid
Sundararajan, Vijaya
Brown, Kaye
Gifford, Sandra M
author_sort Correa-Velez, Ignacio
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hospitalisation for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSHs) has become a recognised tool to measure access to primary care. Timely and effective outpatient care is highly relevant to refugee populations given the past exposure to torture and trauma, and poor access to adequate health care in their countries of origin and during flight. Little is known about ACSHs among resettled refugee populations. With the aim of examining the hypothesis that people from refugee backgrounds have higher ACSHs than people born in the country of hospitalisation, this study analysed a six-year state-wide hospital discharge dataset to estimate ACSH rates for residents born in refugee-source countries and compared them with the Australia-born population. METHODS: Hospital discharge data between 1 July 1998 and 30 June 2004 from the Victorian Admitted Episodes Dataset were used to assess ACSH rates among residents born in eight refugee-source countries, and compare them with the Australia-born average. Rate ratios and 95% confidence levels were used to illustrate these comparisons. Four categories of ambulatory care sensitive conditions were measured: total, acute, chronic and vaccine-preventable. Country of birth was used as a proxy indicator of refugee status. RESULTS: When compared with the Australia-born population, hospitalisations for total and acute ambulatory care sensitive conditions were lower among refugee-born persons over the six-year period. Chronic and vaccine-preventable ACSHs were largely similar between the two population groups. CONCLUSION: Contrary to our hypothesis, preventable hospitalisation rates among people born in refugee-source countries were no higher than Australia-born population averages. More research is needed to elucidate whether low rates of preventable hospitalisation indicate better health status, appropriate health habits, timely and effective care-seeking behaviour and outpatient care, or overall low levels of health care-seeking due to other more pressing needs during the initial period of resettlement. It is important to unpack dimensions of health status and health care access in refugee populations through ad-hoc surveys as the refugee population is not a homogenous group despite sharing a common experience of forced displacement and violence-related trauma.
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spelling pubmed-20820112007-11-20 A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries Correa-Velez, Ignacio Ansari, Zahid Sundararajan, Vijaya Brown, Kaye Gifford, Sandra M Popul Health Metr Research BACKGROUND: Hospitalisation for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSHs) has become a recognised tool to measure access to primary care. Timely and effective outpatient care is highly relevant to refugee populations given the past exposure to torture and trauma, and poor access to adequate health care in their countries of origin and during flight. Little is known about ACSHs among resettled refugee populations. With the aim of examining the hypothesis that people from refugee backgrounds have higher ACSHs than people born in the country of hospitalisation, this study analysed a six-year state-wide hospital discharge dataset to estimate ACSH rates for residents born in refugee-source countries and compared them with the Australia-born population. METHODS: Hospital discharge data between 1 July 1998 and 30 June 2004 from the Victorian Admitted Episodes Dataset were used to assess ACSH rates among residents born in eight refugee-source countries, and compare them with the Australia-born average. Rate ratios and 95% confidence levels were used to illustrate these comparisons. Four categories of ambulatory care sensitive conditions were measured: total, acute, chronic and vaccine-preventable. Country of birth was used as a proxy indicator of refugee status. RESULTS: When compared with the Australia-born population, hospitalisations for total and acute ambulatory care sensitive conditions were lower among refugee-born persons over the six-year period. Chronic and vaccine-preventable ACSHs were largely similar between the two population groups. CONCLUSION: Contrary to our hypothesis, preventable hospitalisation rates among people born in refugee-source countries were no higher than Australia-born population averages. More research is needed to elucidate whether low rates of preventable hospitalisation indicate better health status, appropriate health habits, timely and effective care-seeking behaviour and outpatient care, or overall low levels of health care-seeking due to other more pressing needs during the initial period of resettlement. It is important to unpack dimensions of health status and health care access in refugee populations through ad-hoc surveys as the refugee population is not a homogenous group despite sharing a common experience of forced displacement and violence-related trauma. BioMed Central 2007-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2082011/ /pubmed/17910776 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-5-9 Text en Copyright © 2007 Correa-Velez et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Correa-Velez, Ignacio
Ansari, Zahid
Sundararajan, Vijaya
Brown, Kaye
Gifford, Sandra M
A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title_full A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title_fullStr A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title_full_unstemmed A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title_short A six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
title_sort six-year descriptive analysis of hospitalisations for ambulatory care sensitive conditions among people born in refugee-source countries
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2082011/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17910776
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-5-9
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