(Press-News.org) NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – The household income of its residents is the most important factor in whether a community has high or low rates of avoidable hospital visits – conditions that could be better managed in a doctor's office or other health care settings if treated at an early stage, according to a report released today by the Rutgers Center for State Health Policy (CSHP).
An analysis of hospital billing records and demographic data by Rutgers researchers across 13 low-income communities in New Jersey found that as an area's per capita income rises, the number of patients who seek medical care in the hospital falls dramatically. Specifically, a 1 percent increase in local area per capita income was associated with a 0.85 percent decrease in avoidable hospitalizations.
The Rutgers team also discovered that hospital systems in some low-income areas perform better than one would expect given their per capita income and other socioeconomic disadvantages.
For example, Camden, an area that is known for high rates of avoidable hospital visits, performs better than expected after statistically adjusting for the city's high level of socioeconomic disadvantage, according to the researchers. In contrast, high rates of avoidable visits in Jersey City and Asbury Park changed little after socioeconomic adjustments. This suggests that avoidable hospitalizations in these places are most likely related to factors other than income – such as the lack of access to primary care doctors.
The report – funded by The Nicholson Foundation as part of its ongoing effort to improve the quality and affordability of health care in New Jersey's underserved communities – can help policymakers and health care providers understand variations in hospital use so they can design strategies to limit avoidable hospitalizations.
"The findings show how well a hospital system can perform in the face of poverty," said Rachel Cahill, director of health care improvement and transformation at The Nicholson Foundation. "The fact that some low-income areas are performing well despite their dire situations indicates that there is great potential for improvement."
The report, Cahill says, has important policy implications as New Jersey begins to implement its three-year Medicaid Accountable Care Organization (ACO) pilot, a demonstration project to improve the quality and affordability of care in low-income regions. Medicaid ACOs assume responsibility for coordinating the care of Medicaid beneficiaries within a geographic region and share savings accrued from improved care delivery and reductions of costly medical episodes.
"In many low-income communities, lowering avoidable hospital use and cost requires emphasis on the social determinants of health," said the report's lead author Derek DeLia, associate research professor at the CSHP. "This is especially true in communities that perform better than expected after adjusting for socioeconomic factors. In these communities, interventions that give special consideration to the daily stresses and problems associated with poverty – such as unsafe neighborhoods, unstable housing, lack of transportation, or limited access to healthy foods – can play a greater role in improving health and reducing avoidable medical episodes than a purely medical care focus."
The researchers used data from hospital administrative records and the U.S. Census Bureau to calculate rates of unnecessary hospital visits for all New Jersey ZIP codes from 2008 to 2010. They looked at the records of patients with conditions such as asthma, pneumonia, chronic pulmonary obstructive disease and congestive heart failure because these are conditions for which hospitalization is often preventable when access to primary care is adequate.
The statistical analysis that tied income to hospitalizations held even after accounting for such social indicators as widespread unemployment or illiteracy, and characteristics of local
hospitals, including the number of available beds.
INFORMATION:
The study is part of a larger body of work from the Rutgers center funded by The Nicholson Foundation examining patterns of health care delivery and costs among potential Medicaid ACO communities within New Jersey. To learn more about CSHP research, visit http://www.cshp.rutgers.edu/.
About Rutgers University: Established in 1766, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is America's eighth oldest institution of higher learning and one of the nation's premier public research universities, educating more than 65,000 students and serving the people of New Jersey at campuses, divisions, research centers and clinical practices throughout the state. Rutgers' flagship, based in New Brunswick, is the only public institution in New Jersey represented in the prestigious Association of American Universities. Rutgers University is also a member of the Big Ten Conference and its academic counterpart, the Committee on Institutional Cooperation – a consortium of 15 world-class research universities.
About The Nicholson Foundation: The Nicholson Foundation works collaboratively to improve the quality and affordability of health care for vulnerable populations in New Jersey by transforming how it is paid for and delivered. The foundation's approach emphasizes partnerships and performance-based grant making; its goal is sustainable systems reform. For more information about the foundation, visit http://www.thenicholsonfoundation-newjersey.org.
Income is a major driver of avoidable hospitalizations across New Jersey
New Rutgers study finds wide differences in hospital use across the state
2014-07-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Dimly lit working environments: Correcting your body clock is possible!
2014-07-30
This news release is available in French.
Researchers at Inserm, led by Claude Gronfier (Inserm Unit 846: Stem Cell and Brain Institute), have, for the first time, conducted a study under real conditions on the body clocks of members of the international polar research station Concordia. The researchers have shown that a particular kind of artificial light is capable of ensuring that their biological rhythms are correctly synchronised despite the absence of sunlight. The full significance of this result can be appreciated with the knowledge that disturbance to this ...
Saving seeds the right way can save the world's plants
2014-07-30
KNOXVILLE—Exotic pests, shrinking ranges and a changing climate threaten some of the world's most rare and ecologically important plants, and so conservationists establish seed collections to save the seeds in banks or botanical gardens in hopes of preserving some genetic diversity.
For decades, these seed collections have been guided by simple models that offer a one-size-fits-all approach for how many seeds to gather, such as recommending saving 50 seed samples regardless of species' pollination mode, growth habitat and population size.
A new study, however, has found ...
Neuro researchers advocate for a shift in thinking for stroke rehabilitation
2014-07-30
Los Angeles, CA (July 30, 2014) With the advent of non-surgical modalities, stimulation of the brain has become a popular science and researchers must work to ensure systematic methods for consistent results in the study of stroke rehabilitation. A new study out today in The Neuroscientist discusses a systematic shift in perspective and suggests that chronically stimulating premotor areas (PMAs) of the brain would strongly promote stroke motor recovery, for example by restoring balance between the stroke and the intact hemispheres while establishing greater widespread connectivity. ...
Money talks when it comes to acceptability of 'sin' companies, study reveals
2014-07-30
Toronto – Companies who make their money in the "sin" industries such as the tobacco, alcohol and gaming industries typically receive less attention from institutional investors and financial analysts.
But new research shows social norms and attitudes towards these types of businesses are subject to compromise when their share price looks to be on the rise. A paper from the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management found that institutional shareholdings and analysts' coverage of sin firms were low when firm performance was low but went up with rising performance ...
Brain response to appetizing food cues varies among obese people
2014-07-30
Washington, DC—People who have the most common genetic mutation linked to obesity respond differently to pictures of appetizing foods than overweight or obese people who do not have the genetic mutation, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
More than one-third of adults are obese. Obesity typically results from a combination of eating too much, getting too little physical activity and genetics. In particular, consumption of appetizing foods that are high in calories can lead to weight gain. ...
Teen insomnia is linked with depression and anxiety
2014-07-30
A study of high school students by University of Adelaide psychology researchers has shed new light on the links between insomnia-related mental health conditions among teens.
School of Psychology PhD student Pasquale Alvaro surveyed more than 300 Australian high school students aged 12-18 to better understand their sleep habits, mental health condition and the time of day they were most active (known as their "chronotype").
The results, now published in the journal Sleep Medicine, may have implications for the clinical treatment of teens experiencing sleep and mental ...
High frequency of potential entrapment gaps in hospital beds
2014-07-30
A survey of beds within a large teaching hospital in Ireland has shown than many of them did not comply with dimensional standards put in place to minimise the risk of entrapment. The report, published online in the journal Age and Ageing, therefore emphasises the need for careful selection of patients for whom bedrails are to be used, as well as the need for monitoring and maintenance of hospital bed systems.
Bedrails are commonly used as safety devices to prevent people falling from bed. However, although the risk for any individual is extremely low, people can and ...
Chinese mosquitos on the Baltic Sea
2014-07-30
The analysis of the roughly 3,000 pieces is still in its infant stage. But it is already evident that the results will be of major significance. "Amazingly often, we are finding–in addition to Asian forms–the same insect species in Fushun amber that we found in Baltic amber," explained Bonn paleontologist Professor Dr. Jes Rust.
The Baltic amber comes from the Baltic Sea region, which is almost 10,000 kilometers from Fushun. Sites rich in finds are, e.g., the coastal regions of Mecklenburg, Poland and Belarus. The pieces from the Baltic region are slightly younger than ...
All-in-one energy system offers greener power for off-grid homes, farms
2014-07-30
An innovative 'trigeneration' system fuelled entirely by raw plant oils could have great potential for isolated homes and businesses operating outside grid systems both in the UK and abroad.
Developed by a consortium led by Newcastle University and funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) through the RCUK Energy Programme, the small-scale combined cooling, heat and power system has been designed to provide dependable electricity without the need for a mains connection.
Ideally suited for small-holdings and businesses, and particularly ...
Toward a home test for detecting potentially dangerous levels of caffeine
2014-07-30
The shocking news of an Ohio teen who died of a caffeine overdose in May highlighted the potential dangers of the normally well-tolerated and mass-consumed substance. To help prevent serious health problems that can arise from consuming too much caffeine, scientists are reporting progress toward a rapid, at-home test to detect even low levels of the stimulant in most beverages and even breast milk. Their report appears in ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Mani Subramanian and colleagues note that caffeine's popularity as a "pick-me-up" has led to it being ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Novel model advances microfiber-reinforced concrete research
Scientists develop new AI method to forecast cyclone rapid intensification
Interpreting metamaterials from an artistic view
Smoking cannabis in the home increases odds of detectable levels in children
Ohio State astronomy professor awarded Henry Draper Medal
Communities of color face greater barriers in accessing opioid medications for pain management
Researchers track sharp increase in diagnoses for sedative, hypnotic and anxiety use disorder in young adults
Advancement in DNA quantum computing using electric field gradients and nuclear spins
How pomalidomide boosts the immune system to fight multiple myeloma
PREPSOIL webinar explores soil literacy among youth: Why it matters and how educators can foster it
Imagining the physics of George R.R. Martin’s fictional universe
New twist in mystery of dinosaurs' origin
Baseline fasting glucose level, age, sex, and BMI and the development of diabetes in US adults
Food insecurity in pregnancy, receipt of food assistance, and perinatal complications
Exposure to secondhand cannabis smoke among children
New study reveals how a ‘non-industrialized’ style diet can reduce risk of chronic disease
Plant’s name-giving feature found to be new offspring-ensuring method
Predicting how childhood kidney cancers develop
New optical memory unit poised to improve processing speed and efficiency
World Leprosy Day: Tailored guidelines and reduced stigma needed to tackle leprosy, Irish case study reveals
FAU secures $21M Promise Neighborhoods grant for Broward UP underserved communities
Korea-US leading research institutes accelerate collaboration for energy technology innovation
JAMA names ten academic physicians and nurses to 2025 Editorial Fellowship Program
New study highlights role of lean red meat in gut and heart health as part of a balanced healthy diet
Microporous crystals for greater food safety – ERC proof of concept grant for researcher at Graz University of Technology
Offline versus online promotional media: Which drives better consumer engagement and behavioral responses?
Seoultech researchers use machine learning to ensure safe structural design
Empowering numerical weather predictions with drones as meteorological tools
From root to shoot: How silicon powers plant resilience
Curiosity- driven experiment helps unravel antibiotic-resistance mystery
[Press-News.org] Income is a major driver of avoidable hospitalizations across New JerseyNew Rutgers study finds wide differences in hospital use across the state