Critical illness among patients experiencing homelessness: a
retrospective cohort study
by K. M. Sauro, C.
M. O’Rielly, J. Kersen, A. Soo, S. M. Bagshaw and H. T. Stelfox
Critical Care volume 27,
Article number: 477 (2023) Published: 06
December 2023
Purpose
To understand the epidemiology and healthcare use of
critically ill patients experiencing homelessness compared to critically ill
patients with stable housing.
Methods
This retrospective population-based cohort study included
adults admitted to any ICU in Alberta, Canada, for a 3-year period.
Administrative and clinical data from the hospital, ICU and emergency
department were used to examine healthcare resource use (processes of care, ICU
and hospital length of stay, hospital readmission and emergency room visits).
Regression was used to quantify differences in healthcare use by housing
status.
Results
2.3% (n = 1086) of patients admitted to the ICU were
experiencing homelessness; these patients were younger, more commonly admitted
for medical reasons and had fewer comorbidities compared to those with stable
housing. Processes of care in the ICU were mostly similar, but healthcare use
after ICU was different; patients experiencing homelessness who survived their
index hospitalization were more than twice as likely to have a visit to the
emergency department (OR = 2.3 times, 95% CI 2.0–2.6, < 0.001) or be readmitted
to hospital (OR = 2.1, 95% CI 1.8–2.4, p < 0.001) within 30 days, and
stayed 10.1 days longer in hospital (95% CI 8.6–11.6, p < 0.001),
compared with those who have stable housing.
Conclusions
Patients experiencing homelessness have different
characteristics at ICU admission and have similar processes of care in ICU, but
their subsequent use of healthcare resources was higher than patients with
stable housing. These findings can inform strategies to prepare patients
experiencing homelessness for discharge from the ICU to reduce healthcare
resource use after critical illness.
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