Background Residential segregation is a spatial manifestation of structural racism. Racial disparities in emergency department (ED) uti¬lization mirror social inequity in the larger community. We evaluated associations between residential segregation and ED utilization in a community with known disparities and geographically concentrated social and health risk. methods Cross-sectional data were collected from electronic medical records of 101 060 adult ED patients living in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina in 2017. Community context was measured as residential segregation using the dissimilarity index, categorized into quin¬tiles (Q1–Q5) using 2013–2017 American Community Survey estimates, and residency in a public health priority area (PHPA). The outcome was measured as total ED visits during the study period. Associations between community context and ED utilization were modeled using Anderson’s behavioral model of health service utilization, and estimated using negative binomial regression, including interaction terms by race. results Compared to areas with the lowest proportions of Black residents (Q1), living in Q4 was associated with higher rates of ED utilization among Black/Other (AME = 0.11) and White (AME = 0.23) patients, while associations with living in Q5 were approximately equivalent (AME = 0.12). PHPA residency was associated with higher rates of ED utilization among Black/Other (AME = 0.10) and White patients (AME = 0.22). limitations Associations should not be interpreted as causal, or be generalized to the larger community without ED utilization. Health system leakage is possible but limited. conclusions Residential segregation is associated with higher rates of ED utilization, as are PHPA residency and other individual-level determinants.
CITATION STYLE
Mayfield, C. A., De Hernandez, B. U., Geraci, M., Eberth, J. M., Dulin, M., & Merchant, A. T. (2022). Residential Segregation and Emergency Department Utilization Among an Underserved Urban Emergency Department Sample in North Carolina. North Carolina Medical Journal, 83(1), 48–57. https://doi.org/10.18043/ncm.83.1.48
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