Geriatric Homelessness: Association with Emergency Department Utilization

Authors

  • Ana Hategan McMaster University
  • Daniel Tisi St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton
  • Mariam Abdurrahman University of Toronto
  • James A. Bourgeois University of California San Francisco Medical Center

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.19.253

Keywords:

aging, geriatric homelessness, emergency department utilization, hospital utilization

Abstract

Background

Homeless adults frequently use emergency departments (EDs), yet previous studies investigating ED utilization by the older segment received little attention. This study sought to characterize older homeless adults who utilized local urban EDs.

Methods

ED encounters at three hospitals in Hamilton (Ont.) were analyzed, and demographic and clinical characteristics of the older homeless (age > 50) vs. younger counterparts (age ≤ 50) were compared during a 24-month period.

Results

Of all adults, 1,330 were homeless, of whom 66% were above age 50. Older homeless adults sought less acute care within 30 days from an index visit compared with their younger counterparts. Non-acute illnesses constituted only 18% of triaged cases. Older homeless women with access to a primary care physician (PCP) were 3.3 times more likely to return to ED within 30 days, whereas older homeless men (irrespective of PCP access) were less likely to return to ED.

Conclusions

Despite high homeless patient acuity, a lesser number of ED visits with increasing age remains concerning because of previously reported high morbidity and mortality rates. Access to primary care may not be enough to reduce ED utilization. Further research is needed to evaluate acute care interventions and their effectiveness in ED, and to identify homeless patients requiring more targeted services.

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Published

2016-11-03

How to Cite

1.
Hategan A, Tisi D, Abdurrahman M, Bourgeois JA. Geriatric Homelessness: Association with Emergency Department Utilization. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2016 Nov. 3 [cited 2024 Apr. 18];19(4):189-94. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/253

Issue

Section

Original Research