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Journal of Urban Health : Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine logoLink to Journal of Urban Health : Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine
. 2001 Mar;78(1):104–111. doi: 10.1093/jurban/78.1.104

Where health and welfare meet: Social deprivation among patients in the emergency department

James A Gordon 1,2,3,, Carl R Chudnofsky 5, Rodney A Hayward 6
PMCID: PMC3456193  PMID: 11368190

Abstract

Context

As a safety net provider for many disadvantaged Americans, the emergency department (ED) may be an efficient site not only for providing acute medical care, but also for addressing serious social needs.

Objective

To characterize the social needs of ED patients, and to evaluate whether the most disadvantaged patients have connections with the health and welfare system outside the ED.

Design

Cross-sectional survey conducted over 24 hours in the fall of 1997.

Setting

Three EDs: an urban public teaching hospital, a suburban university hospital, and a semirural community hospital.

Participants

Consecutive patients presenting for care, including those transported by ambulance. The survey response rate was 91% (N=300; urban=115, suburban=102, rural=83).

Main Outcome Measure

Index of socioeconomic deprivation described by the US Census Bureau (based on food, housing, and utilities).

Results

Of all ED patients, 31% reported one or more serious social deprivations. For example, 13% of urban patients reported not having enough food to eat, and 9% of rural patients reported disconnection of their gas or electricity (US population averages both less than 3%). While 40% of all patients had no consistent health care outside the ED (≤1 visit/year), those with higher levels of social deprivation had the least contact with the health care system outside the ED (P<.01). Although those with higher levels of deprivation were more likely to receive public assistance, still almost one-quarter of patients with high-level social deprivation were not receiving public aid.

Conclusion

Many ED patients suffer from fundamental social deprivations that threaten basic health. The most disadvantaged of these patients frequently lack contact with other medical care sites or public assistance networks. Community efforts to address serious social deprivation should include partnerships with the local ED.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (91.2 KB).

Footnotes

At the time of this work, Dr. Gordon was supported at the University of Michigan by the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Both Dr. Gordon and Dr. Chudnofsky were in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Michigan.

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