A comparison of individual and ecological indicators of social deprivation and their association with hospital efficiency in the context of infectious diseases in two French general paediatric departments

Author:

Roussel Aphaia123,Faye Albert123,Lefevre-Utile Alain1,De Pontual Loic4,Chevreul Karine235,Michel Morgane235

Affiliation:

1. Service de Pédiatrie Générale, Hôpital Robert Debré, Assistance Publique des Hôpitaux de Paris, 48 boulevard Sérurier, 75019 Paris, France

2. Inserm, ECEVE, U1123, 10 boulevard de Verdun, 75010 Paris, France

3. Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 10 boulevard de Verdun, 75010 Paris, France

4. Service de Pédiatrie Générale, Hôpital Jean Verdier, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Avenue du 14 Juillet, 93140 Bondy, France

5. URC Eco Ile de France, DRCD, Hôtel Dieu, 1 place du Parvis de Notre Dame, 75004 Paris, France

Abstract

Abstract Background To identify deprivation indicators usable in everyday practice and included in medico-administrative databases, particularly with infectious diseases, which represent the greatest proportion of hospitalizations. Our objective was to compare ecological indicators to individual questionnaires and apply both types to the study of the impact of deprivation on hospital efficiency. Methods We conducted an epidemiological observational prospective multicentre study in two French public hospitals between 20 October 2016 and 20 March 2017. Children hospitalized for one of the four most common infectious diseases were included and their parents were asked to answer the Evaluation of Precarity and Inequalities in Health Examination Centers (EPICES) questionnaire. The ecological indicator French DEPrivation index (FDep) was derived from patients’ address, both at the zip code and at a smaller geographical area (IRIS [ilôts de regroupement pour l'information statistique]) level. Correlation and concordance between the three indicators were assessed. The endpoint used to assess the impact on hospital efficiency was the ratio between patients’ length of stay (LOS) and the national LOS of their disease-related group. Results Data were available for 540 patients with a mean age of 9 mo. A total of 56.1% of patients were considered deprived with EPICES, 50.4% with zip code FDep and 45.7% with IRIS FDep. Concordance between EPICES and either type of FDep was <0.1. There was no increase in LOS compared with national LOS with any of the indicators. Conclusions Individual and ecological indicators do not measure the same aspects of deprivation. The decision to use one or the other must be carefully weighed when studying the impact of deprivation on the healthcare system.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Health (social science)

Reference22 articles.

1. Poverty in the United Kingdom;Townsend,1979

2. The influence of social deprivation on length of hospitalisation;Yilmaz;Eur J Health Econ.,2013

3. Prise en charge de la précarité dans les établissements de santé;Bréchat;Gestions hospitalières.,2009

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