Paediatric inpatient utilisation in a district general hospital.
Open Access
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 70 (6) , 488-492
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.70.6.488
Abstract
Paediatric inpatient utilisation in a district general hospital was studied for 20 general practices covering a population of 26,433 children. The factors influencing the rate and route of admission (general practitioner (GP) or accident and emergency department) were analysed for 894 emergency non-traumatic admissions over a 12 month period. The overall rate of acute, nontraumatic admission was 33.8/1000; 35% of these admissions were via the accident and emergency department. Asthma was the most common reason for admission (16.1%); 56.9% of the admissions resulted from respiratory tract illness and 44% were for an infective illness. There was a significant variation in the route and rate of admission across practices. Admission rates ranged from 10 to 70/1000 children under 15 and the proportion via the accident and emergency department from 19% to 85%. The proportion of admissions via the accident and emergency department for each practice was highly negatively correlated with the number of GPs in the practice, the number of children under 15 registered, and positively correlated with the unemployment rate attributed to the list. Using multiple logistic regression analysis, the risk of being admitted via the accident and emergency department relative to GP admission was shown to be higher for older children (odds ratio for each year of age 1.05) and less for children registered with large practices with more GPs (odds ratio for each extra GP 0.36) or practices with more children under 15 (odds ratio per extra child 0.9991). Access to hospital as measured by isochrone bars and social characteristics of the ward of residence of each child admitted were not associated with the route of admission. The admission rate for each practice was positively, but not statistically significantly, associated with the unemployment rate attributed to the list, the unemployment rate of the ward where the practice was located, and the percentage of admissions via accident and emergency, and negatively associated with the percentage of the list under 15 years.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Paediatric outpatient utilisation in a district general hospital.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1992
- Use of an east end children's accident and emergency department for infants: a failure of primary health care?Quality and Safety in Health Care, 1992
- Trends in paediatric medical admissions.BMJ, 1989
- Self referral to accident and emergency department: patients' perceptions.BMJ, 1988
- Medically Inappropriate Hospital Use in a Pediatric PopulationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Logic in medicine: an economic perspective.BMJ, 1987
- Patient Use of a Paediatric Hospital Casualty Department in the East End of LondonFamily Practice, 1987
- Follow‐up of the first national birth cohort: Findings from the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and DevelopmentPaediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 1987
- Will Payment Based on Diagnosis-Related Groups Control Hospital Costs?New England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Seasonal variation and time trends in childhood asthma in England and Wales 1975-81.BMJ, 1984