Risk factors for unplanned hospital admission in a specialist homeless general practice population: case–control study to investigate the relationship with tri-morbidity

Author:

Himsworth Catherine,Paudyal Priyamvada,Sargeant Christopher

Abstract

Background‘Tri-morbidity’ describes the complex comorbidity of chronic physical illness, mental illness, and alcohol and/or drug misuse within the homeless population. Poor health outcomes of homeless people are reflected by the higher rate of unplanned hospital admissions compared with the non-homeless population.AimTo identify whether tri-morbidity is a risk factor for unplanned hospital admissions in the homeless population.Design and settingA case–control study of patients who were registered with a specialist homeless GP surgery in Brighton (72 cases and 72 controls).MethodCases were defined as those who had ≥1 overnight hospital admission within a 12-month period. Controls were matched for demographics but with no hospital admission. The primary care record was analysed, and tri-morbidity entered into binomial logistic regression with admission as the dichotomous dependent variable.ResultsThe logistic regression analysis demonstrated that other enduring mental health disorders and/or personality disorder (odds ratio [OR] 3.84, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.56 to 9.44), alcohol use (OR 2.92, 95% CI = 1.42 to 5.98), and gastrointestinal disorder (OR 2.90, 95% CI = 1.06 to 7.98) were independent risk factors for admission. Tri-morbidity increased odds of admission by more than four-fold (OR 4.19, 95% CI = 1.90 to 9.27).ConclusionThis study shows that tri-morbidity is an important risk factor for unplanned hospital admissions among the homeless population, and provides an interesting starting point for the development of a risk stratification tool to identify those at risk of unplanned admission in this population.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Subject

Family Practice

Reference14 articles.

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2. Hutchison S Alcott L Albanese F Needs to know: including single homelessness in Joint Strategic Needs Assessments London Homeless Link 2014 https://www.homeless.org.uk/sites/default/files/site-attachments/20141009%20Needs_to_Know_Report_2014_Final.pdf (accessed 29 Apr 2020).

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5. Multimorbidity, disadvantage, and patient engagement within a specialist homeless health service in the UK: an in-depth study of general practice data

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