Geographic variation in emergency department presentations among youth (10–24 years), New South Wales 2019: An epidemiological study

Author:

Butler Sally1ORCID,Tall Julie2,Luscombe Georgina M3

Affiliation:

1. School of Rural Medicine Charles Sturt University Orange New South Wales Australia

2. Health Intelligence Unit Western NSW Local Health District Orange New South Wales Australia

3. School of Rural Health, The University of Sydney Orange/Dubbo New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo characterise ED presentations among youth in New South Wales (NSW) by geographic remoteness for 2019 and determine if intra‐regional (inland vs coastal) variations exist.MethodsA population‐based, retrospective descriptive analysis of 2019 Emergency Department Data Collection registry data for state‐wide emergency presentations to NSW public hospitals among NSW residents aged 10–24 years was undertaken. Local government areas of residence were classified as major city, coastal regional, inland regional or remote. Sex and age‐adjusted ED presentation rates were modelled according to geographical classification, using negative binomial regression.ResultsIn 2019, 178 public ED facilities in NSW received 479 880 presentations from NSW residents aged 10–24 years. ED presentation rates in regional and remote areas were more than twice (incidence rate ratio 2.23, 95% confidence interval 2.08–2.39) and four times (incidence rate ratio 4.32, 95% confidence interval 3.84–4.87) that, respectively, of major cities. Compared to major cities, youth presenting to regional and remote facilities spent 36% and 60% less time in ED, respectively, with presentations less likely to be deemed critical, occur after‐hours or result in hospital admission. Variation between inland and coastal regional indicators was minimal.ConclusionsPatterns of ED utilisation between major city, regional and remote youth were distinctly different, but not so between coastal and inland regional youth. Further research could better understand ED utilisation among youth and the drivers of higher presentation rates in regional and remote areas.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

Reference31 articles.

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2. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Young Australians: Their Health and Wellbeing 2011. Canberra: AIHW 2011. Report No.: PHE 140.

3. Australian Government Productivity Commission. Report of Government Services 2021: part E section 10 – primary and community health 2021. [Cited 5 Mar 2022.] Available from URL:https://www.pc.gov.au/research/ongoing/report‐on‐government‐services/2021/health

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Use of emergency departments for lower urgency care: 2015‐16 to 2018‐19. Canberra: AIHW 2020. Report No.: PHC 3.

5. Rural emergency departments supplement general practice care

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