«Young adults with full - year private insurance coverage certainly had the «optimal utilization,» with the highest office - based visit and the lowest
emergency room visit rates when compared to those with public insurance, those with gaps in coverage or the uninsured.»
Not exact matches
We will look at compelling statistics about infant abuse / Shaken Baby Syndrome, infant
emergency room visits, as well as Breastfeeding initiation and duration
rates and how the introduction of baby carriers as a public health intervention could effect those different statistics.
The study, which was funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found lower
rates of confirmed abuse cases, child out — of — home placements, and hospitalizations and
emergency room visits for child injuries in counties where parenting support was implemented.
These youngsters also tend to have higher
rates of accidental injuries — injuries from falls off furniture after excessive climbing, falling or jumping out of windows or off decks, unbuckling restraints and standing up in the car or stroller, even accidentally drinking poison — resulting in more
emergency room visits.
It found that adults in Williamsburg, Bushwick, Bed - Stuy and East New York had higher
rates of
emergency room visits for asthma than other neighborhoods.
The study analyzed data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, exploring which demographic groups, medications, and reasons for
visiting the
emergency room may account for this change in prescribing
rates.
In the first multi-state study of children's and non-children's hospitals, assessing pediatric readmission and revisit
rates — being admitted into the hospital again or
visiting the
emergency room within 30 days of discharge — for common pediatric conditions, UCSF researchers found that diagnosis - specific readmission and revisit
rates are limited in their usefulness as a quality indicator for pediatric hospital care.
According to the Canadian Institute for Health Information, an estimated 171,000 Canadians
visited emergency rooms for allergic reactions from 2013 to 2014, the
rate of anaphylaxis
visits increased by 95 per cent from 2006 to 2014, and the severity of reactions is increasing.
Asthma
visits in primary care settings,
emergency room visits, and hospitalizations were all stable from 2001 to 2009, and asthma death
rates per 1,000 persons with asthma declined from 2001 to 2009.158 To the extent that increased pollen exposures occur, patients and their physicians will face increased challenges in maintaining adequate asthma control.
Data from the 12 months following the end of the intervention showed that those counties receiving System Triple P had significantly lower levels of
rates of substantiated CM, child out - of - home placements, and hospitalizations or
emergency -
room visits for CM injuries than the control counties.
Conversely, economic and social disadvantage are associated with higher
rates of
emergency room (ER)
visits and hospitalizations (Brooks - Gunn, McCormick, Klebanov, & McCarton, 1998; Frank et al., 2010).