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Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers

BACKGROUND: Human error due to risky behaviour is a common and important contributor to acute injury related to poverty. We studied whether social benefit payments mitigate or exacerbate risky behaviours that lead to emergency visits for acute injury among low-income mothers with dependent children....

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Autores principales: Redelmeier, Donald A, Chan, William K, Mullainathan, Sendhil, Shafir, Eldar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Medicine Publications, Inc. 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3654504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23687523
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author Redelmeier, Donald A
Chan, William K
Mullainathan, Sendhil
Shafir, Eldar
author_facet Redelmeier, Donald A
Chan, William K
Mullainathan, Sendhil
Shafir, Eldar
author_sort Redelmeier, Donald A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Human error due to risky behaviour is a common and important contributor to acute injury related to poverty. We studied whether social benefit payments mitigate or exacerbate risky behaviours that lead to emergency visits for acute injury among low-income mothers with dependent children. METHODS: We analyzed total emergency department visits throughout Ontario to identify women between 15 and 55 years of age who were mothers of children younger than 18 years, who were living in the lowest socio-economic quintile and who presented with acute injury. We used universal health care databases to evaluate emergency department visits during specific days on which social benefit payments were made (child benefit distribution) relative to visits on control days over a 7-year interval (1 April 2003 to 31 March 2010). RESULTS: A total of 153 377 emergency department visits met the inclusion criteria. We observed fewer emergencies per day on child benefit payment days than on control days (56.4 v. 60.1, p = 0.008). The difference was primarily explained by lower values among mothers age 35 years or younger (relative reduction 7.29%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.69% to 12.88%), those living in urban areas (relative reduction 7.07%, 95% CI 3.05% to 11.10%) and those treated at community hospitals (relative reduction 6.83%, 95% CI 2.46% to 11.19%). No significant differences were observed for the 7 days immediately before or the 7 days immediately after the child benefit payment. INTERPRETATION: Contrary to political commentary, we found that small reductions in relative poverty mitigated, rather than exacerbated, risky behaviours that contribute to acute injury among low-income mothers with dependent children.
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spelling pubmed-36545042013-05-17 Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers Redelmeier, Donald A Chan, William K Mullainathan, Sendhil Shafir, Eldar Open Med Research BACKGROUND: Human error due to risky behaviour is a common and important contributor to acute injury related to poverty. We studied whether social benefit payments mitigate or exacerbate risky behaviours that lead to emergency visits for acute injury among low-income mothers with dependent children. METHODS: We analyzed total emergency department visits throughout Ontario to identify women between 15 and 55 years of age who were mothers of children younger than 18 years, who were living in the lowest socio-economic quintile and who presented with acute injury. We used universal health care databases to evaluate emergency department visits during specific days on which social benefit payments were made (child benefit distribution) relative to visits on control days over a 7-year interval (1 April 2003 to 31 March 2010). RESULTS: A total of 153 377 emergency department visits met the inclusion criteria. We observed fewer emergencies per day on child benefit payment days than on control days (56.4 v. 60.1, p = 0.008). The difference was primarily explained by lower values among mothers age 35 years or younger (relative reduction 7.29%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.69% to 12.88%), those living in urban areas (relative reduction 7.07%, 95% CI 3.05% to 11.10%) and those treated at community hospitals (relative reduction 6.83%, 95% CI 2.46% to 11.19%). No significant differences were observed for the 7 days immediately before or the 7 days immediately after the child benefit payment. INTERPRETATION: Contrary to political commentary, we found that small reductions in relative poverty mitigated, rather than exacerbated, risky behaviours that contribute to acute injury among low-income mothers with dependent children. Open Medicine Publications, Inc. 2012-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3654504/ /pubmed/23687523 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ca/ Open Medicine applies the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License, which means that anyone is able to freely copy, download, reprint, reuse, distribute, display or perform this work and that authors retain copyright of their work. Any derivative use of this work must be distributed only under a license identical to this one and must be attributed to the authors. Any of these conditions can be waived with permission from the copyright holder. These conditions do not negate or supersede Fair Use laws in any country.
spellingShingle Research
Redelmeier, Donald A
Chan, William K
Mullainathan, Sendhil
Shafir, Eldar
Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title_full Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title_fullStr Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title_full_unstemmed Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title_short Social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
title_sort social benefit payments and acute injury among low-income mothers
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3654504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23687523
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