Interactive association of chronic illness and food insecurity with emergency department utilization among school‐age children in the United States: A cross‐sectional study

Author:

Ghani Farheen1ORCID,Wang Hao2ORCID,Manning Sydney E.3,Sambamoorthi Usha1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacotherapy, College of Pharmacy University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth Texas USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine JPS Health Network Fort Worth Texas USA

3. AcornAI Medidata Solution Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsFood insecurity combined with chronic disease conditions is a risk factor for Emergency Department (ED) utilization, an indicator of poor quality of care. However, such an association is not certain among school‐age children with chronic conditions. Therefore, we aim to determine the association of food insecurity, chronic conditions, and ED utilization among school‐age children in the United States.MethodsWe analyzed the data from the 2017 Medical expenditure panel survey (MEPS) among children aged 6–17 years (N = 5518). MEPS data was released electronically by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). We identified four groups of school‐age children based on the presence of food security and chronic conditions: 1) with food insecurity and chronic conditions; 2) no food insecurity and chronic conditions; 3) with food insecurity and no chronic conditions; and 4) no food insecurity and no chronic conditions. We compared ED utilization among these four groups using incidence rate ratios (IRR) after adjusting children's age, sex, race and ethnicity, household income, insurance coverage, obesity, and geographic region using count data model, specifically multivariable Poison regression. We used SAS 9.4 and STATA 14.2 for all the data analyses.ResultsThere were unweighted 5518 school‐age children who represented weighted 50,479,419 school‐age children in the final analysis. Overall, 6.0% had food insecurity with chronic conditions. These children had higher ED utilization (19.7%) than the other three groups (13.3%, 8.8%, and 7.2%, p < 0.001). The adjusted IRR of ED utilization among school‐age children with food insecurity and chronic conditions was 1.90 (95% confidence interval 1.20–3.01, p = 0.007) compared with those with food security and chronic conditions.ConclusionOne in 16 school‐age children has both food insecurity and chronic conditions. Food insecurity was positively associated with frequent ED visits in the presence of chronic conditions. Therefore, addressing food insecurity may reduce the risk of ED visits.

Funder

National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference41 articles.

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2. Children living in households that experienced food insecurity: United States, 2019‐2020;Ullmann H;NCHS Data Brief,2022

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4. Are Food Insecurity's Health Impacts Underestimated in the U.S. Population? Marginal Food Security Also Predicts Adverse Health Outcomes in Young U.S. Children and Mothers

5. Association of Food Insecurity with Children's Behavioral, Emotional, and Academic Outcomes: A Systematic Review

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