ABSTRACT
Objectives: Injuries are the leading cause of death among children and youth in the United States, representing a major concern to society and to the public and private health plans covering pediatric patients. Data from ALL Kids, Alabama’s Children’s Health Insurance Program, were used to evaluate the relationship between community-level social determinants of health (SDOH) and pediatric emergency department (ED) use and differences in these associations by age and race.
Study Design: This was a retrospective, pooled cross-sectional analysis.
Methods: We used ALL Kids data to identify ED visits (injury and all-cause) among children who were enrolled at any time from 2015 to 2017. Exploratory factor analysis was used to categorize SDOH from 18 selected Census tract–level variables. Multilevel Poisson regression models were used to evaluate the effects of community and individual factors and their interactions.
Results: Census tract–level SDOH were grouped as low socioeconomic status (SES), urbanicity, and immigrant-density factors. Low SES and urbanicity factors were associated with ED visits (injury and all-cause). The low SES and urbanicity factors also moderated the association between race and ED visits (injury and all-cause).
Conclusions: The environment in which children live influences their ED use; however, the impact varies by age, race, and Census tract factors. Further studies should focus on specific community factors to better understand the relationship among SDOH, individual characteristics, and ED utilization.
Am J Manag Care. 2023;29(3):159-164. https://doi.org/10.37765/ajmc.2023.89330
_____
Takeaway Points
- The environments in which children live influence their risk of injury or emergency department (ED) utilization.
- The impacts of Census tract factors such as low socioeconomic status and rurality on the risk of children’s ED visits for injury are different and warrant further investigations on specific community characteristics.
- The impacts of Census tract factors also vary across demographic characteristics, such as age, gender, and race.
_____
Injuries are the leading cause of death among children and youth in the United States.1 According to the CDC, for every child injury death, 25 children are hospitalized and another 925 are treated in an emergency department (ED).2 Pediatric injuries represent a major concern to society and to the public and private health plans covering pediatric patients.
Unlike ambulatory care–sensitive conditions, injuries are less amenable to prevention through clinical interventions3 and are more likely to be related to patient characteristics and social and environmental factors. The CDC defines social determinants of health (SDOH) as “the conditions in the environments where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship, and age that affect a wide range of health, functioning, and quality-of-life outcomes and risks.”4 In the United States, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status (SES), and environmental characteristics have been shown to be risk factors for childhood injury.5-7 Minority racial/ethnic status and community-level socioeconomic disadvantage have also been linked to higher overall pediatric ED use, perhaps due to lack of access to a usual source of care.8 However, in the presence of financial, physical, and cultural barriers to seeking care, the SDOH associated with increased risk of pediatric injury may not lead to more ED use.9 A more nuanced understanding of the factors that confer increased risk of injury and factors that are barriers to seeking health care among children may inform health care and community-level interventions to address and mitigate these risks.
This study adds to the literature by exploring associations between individual- and community-level characteristics and ED visits among publicly insured children in Alabama. In 2012, the CDC released the National Action Plan for Child Injury Prevention, emphasizing the importance of data-driven research as a key component of a national strategy to reduce childhood injury.10 In some states, health systems have launched interventions targeting pediatric injury prevention at the community level.11 By focusing on a state with one of the highest rates of childhood injury,12 this study uses data from ALL Kids, Alabama’s Children’s Health Insurance Program, to evaluate the relationship between community-level SDOH and pediatric ED use and differences in these associations by age and race.
METHODS
Patient and Public Involvement
Neither patients nor the public were involved in the design, conduct, reporting, or dissemination of this research. This work was approved by the University of Alabama at Birmingham Institutional Review Board (record No. IRB-300003138).
Data and Study Cohort
This study used administrative data from ALL Kids, focused on children enrolled at any time from 2015 to 2017. During this time, ALL Kids coverage was available in 12-month enrollment periods to Alabama children younger than 19 years with family incomes from 146% to 317% of the federal poverty level (FPL).
Individual characteristics, including enrollee age, gender, race, and cost-sharing group, were obtained from administrative data. Race and ethnicity are social constructs but are used as a lens through which to study disparities in health care. We used the following self-reported racial categories: American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, more than 1 race, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, White, and unknown or not reported. The proportions of respondents in the categories other than Black or African American and White were small, so they were combined into an “other” category. Based on previous literature,13,14 18 Census tract–level variables were selected and used for exploratory factor analysis (EFA) to capture community SDOH (eAppendix Table 1 [eAppendix available at ajmc.com]). Home addresses at time of enrollment were used to map children to their Census tract. County-level health resource factors, including the number of pediatricians and the number of total hospital beds per 1000 population, were obtained from Area Health Resource Files.15
Outcomes
The primary health outcome measures were counts of ED visits (injury and all-cause) by enrollee and calendar year. The validated16 New York University (NYU) ED Classification Algorithm, previously used with ALL Kids data,17 was employed to classify common primary ED discharge diagnoses as having varying probabilities of falling into 1 of 4 severity categories.18,19
Statistical Analysis
In this pooled cross-sectional analysis, we used EFA on the Census tract–level variables to reduce complexity and potential collinearity in the models and categorize SDOH.14 Multilevel models were used to explore the association between SDOH and injury ED visits using individual-, Census tract–, and county-level factors. Detailed descriptions of the EFA and multilevel modeling are provided in the eAppendix.
Because the causes and patterns of injuries may be different for younger vs older children, we estimated age-stratified models for children younger than 10 years or 10 years and older.20,21 Other individual covariates included race, gender, and 3 income-based eligibility groups (low-fee, 146%-156% FPL; fee, 157%-208% FPL; and expansion, 209%-317% FPL). Due to small sample size, a fourth no-fee group, composed of Native American children federally exempt from all forms of cost sharing, was combined with the “other” race category of the low-fee group, avoiding issues of multicollinearity.
To explore possible intersectionalities between race and community characteristics, we estimated models containing interaction terms between individual race and SDOH categories. To simplify the interactions between race and SDOH, we categorized each factor into deciles that were included as continuous variables in the model.22
All models were estimated using multilevel mixed-effect Poisson regression, with robust standard errors accounting for the interdependency of observations throughout the study period. Results are presented as incidence rate ratios (IRRs). A 2-sided P value less than .05 was considered significant. All analyses were performed using Stata 16 (StataCorp).
RESULTS
Results From EFA and Summary of Cohort Characteristics
Three SDOH categories were generated by EFA of 18 Census tract–level variables (eAppendix Table 2 and eAppendix Figure): (1) low SES, (2) urbanicity (high degree of urbanization), and (3) immigrant density (high density of recent immigrants). Distributions of individual characteristics across quintiles of SDOH are summarized in eAppendix Table 3.
Results for Injury ED Visits
Low SES was positively associated with injury-related ED visits (Table 1) only among children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.022; P < .01), whereas urbanicity showed negative association in both age groups (≥ 10 years: IRR, 0.987; P < .05; < 10 years: IRR, 0.989; P < .05). No significant associations were observed between immigrant density and injury ED visits.
Black or African American children younger than 10 years had a lower rate of injury ED visits than White children, but there was no significant difference for children 10 years and older. Girls were less likely to have injury ED visits than boys across both age groups. A 1-year increase in age was positively associated with injury ED visits for children younger than 10 years but negatively associated for children 10 years and older.
In models with interaction terms between low SES and race for injury ED visits, low SES remained significant for children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.031; P < .01), whereas the interaction between low SES and Black or African American race was not statistically significant (IRR, 0.981; P = .095). This indicated that although the rate of injury ED visits increased with higher deciles of low SES among children 10 years and older, the increase could be smaller for Black or African American than White children, implying a widening gap between the races at higher deciles of low SES.
In the interaction models, urbanicity remained significant and negative for both age groups, but the interaction of Black or African American race and urbanicity was positive and significant only for children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.036; P < .01). Although Black or African American race and urbanicity were both associated with lower rates of injury ED visits, the interaction term suggested that Black or African American children 10 years and older who live in more urban areas face increased risk of injury relative to White children.
Results for All-Cause ED Visits
Low SES was positively associated with all-cause ED visits for both age groups (Table 2). No significant associations between urbanicity or immigrant density and all-cause ED visits were observed in any model specifications.
Compared with White children, Black or African American children had a higher rate of all-cause ED visits in the group younger than 10 years, whereas children who were neither White nor Black or African American had a lower rate of ED visits in both age groups. Girls 10 years and older were more likely to have all-cause ED visits than younger girls. Age was negatively associated with all-cause ED visits in the group younger than 10 years but positively associated in the group 10 years and older.
In models with interaction terms, the interaction between Black or African American race and urbanicity was significant for both age groups. Again, higher levels of urbanicity had stronger associations with all-cause ED visits for Black or African American children than for White children.
DISCUSSION
In this multilevel analysis using Alabama ALL Kids data and Census tract–level measures of SDOH, we observed statistically significant associations between low SES and urbanicity and ED visits (injury and all-cause). We found that low SES was associated with greater risk of ED visits among older children, whereas low urbanicity (rurality) was associated with greater risk of ED visits for all children in multivariate models.
This study found that the rate of injury-related ED visits among Black or African American children and children who are neither White nor Black or African American is lower compared with that among White children, which is counter to findings of other studies.23,24 ED use by racial and ethnic minority children is often ascribed to their having limited access to primary care, but ALL Kids enrollees have access to the entire Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama provider network, which is the largest private health insurance provider in Alabama. Despite the better accessibility of the provider network, the financial, physical, and cultural barriers to seek care still exist. However, improved access to primary care has been shown to improve efficient use of ED services for ALL Kids.25 Besides, in models with interactions, the results showed a trend whereby Black or African American children 10 years and older living in high-poverty communities are at decreased risk of injury-related ED visits compared with White children living in high-poverty communities. There are concerns that non-White children in low-SES communities may be less likely to seek ED services even when there is a need,26 and it may be conjectured that that underutilization may contribute to the relatively low rate of injury-related ED visits among Black or African American children in this study. The findings of this study suggest the need for further investigation into the underlying causes of observed differences in ED utilization by race and SDOH.
The negative associations observed between urbanicity and ED visits support findings of previous studies that children in rural areas have more unmet medical needs and ED dependence.27,28 However, increased urbanicity was associated with differential increases in ED visits for Black or African American children relative to White children. This is congruent with the findings of Li et al,29 who found that predominantly African American communities had higher ED utilization rates when the ED was located within 0.5 miles of a patient’s residence. For injury ED visits, this study’s findings are consistent with well-documented exposure to community-level violence among urban African American youth.30
Compared with injury ED visits, the reasons for all-cause ED visits are more heterogeneous. Previous studies showed that the accessibility of routine care may have different impacts on ED use for different reasons.3,8 This may explain the discrepancy in our findings between injury ED visits and all-cause ED visits. Further studies focusing on disease-specific ED use could help illustrate the association between SDOH and ED use.
Limitations
This study had limitations. First, the NYU ED algorithm does not specifically assess severity. From the administrative data, we cannot determine whether differences in ED utilization among groups are the result of differences in injury incidence or severity, differences in thresholds for seeking ED services, or differences in diagnosis by physicians. Further study should analyze ED utilization by stratifying the injury type and severity. Second, the use of EFA prevented the examination of associations between injury ED visits and specific community factors. Third, results may be sensitive to what community-level variables were originally available in the data set for potential inclusion through EFA, and the EFA method does not allow researchers to choose variables to include in each factor. Fourth, the age-stratified analysis is limited to 2 broad age groups, whereas the causes of injury and the main reasons for ED visits may vary by finer age categories; hence, future studies with larger sample sizes should do more granular analysis by age. Fifth, we did not control for baseline health status measures in the models. To include controls for the presence of chronic health conditions would require the use of a fixed period of prior coverage, which would further restrict our already limited sample. Finally, this study focused on ALL Kids enrollees of Alabama. Caution must be used when extrapolating results to other states.
CONCLUSIONS
This study provides new evidence of the associations between SDOH and ED utilization among ALL Kids enrollees in Alabama. These findings suggest that the environments in which the children live influence their ED use, although the nature of the influence varies across different demographic groups and Census tract factors. Further studies should focus on specific community factors to better understand the relationship among area-level factors, individual factors, and the risk of childhood injury.
Author Affiliations: Department of Health Policy and Organization, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham (YL, PS, DJB, AB, JM, MAM, BS), Birmingham, AL; Department of Health Policy and Management, Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, Indiana University–Purdue University (JB, NM), Indianapolis, IN; Alabama Department of Public Health Bureau of Children’s Health Insurance (TS), Montgomery, AL.
Source of Funding: This work was funded by the Alabama Department of Public Health (C90116151).
Author Disclosures: Ms Sanders reports previous employment with Alabama Children’s Health Insurance. The remaining authors report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.
Authorship Information: Concept and design (YL, AB, MAM, JB, NM, TS, BS); acquisition of data (DJB, TS); analysis and interpretation of data (YL, PS, DJB, AB, MAM, JB, BS); drafting of the manuscript (YL, AB, JM, MAM, BS); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (YL, PS, DJB, AB, JM, MAM, JB, NM, BS); statistical analysis (YL, PS); obtaining funding (DJB); administrative, technical, or logistic support (JM, NM, TS); and supervision (BS).
Address Correspondence to: Ye Liu, MD, MPH, Department of Health Policy and Organization, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1665 University Blvd, Birmingham, AL 35294. Email: yeliu@uab.edu.
REFERENCES
1. 10 leading causes of death by age group, United States – 2018. CDC. Accessed July 20, 2021. https://www.cdc.gov/injury/wisqars/pdf/leading_causes_of_death_by_age_group_2018-508.pdf
2. Child injury infographic. CDC. April 16, 2012. Accessed June 14, 2021. https://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/childinjury/infographic.html?s_cid=bb-vitalsigns-124
3. Johnson PJ, Ghildayal N, Ward AC, Westgard BC, Boland LL, Hokanson JS. Disparities in potentially avoidable emergency department (ED) care: ED visits for ambulatory care sensitive conditions. Med Care. 2012;50(12):1020-1028. doi:10.1097/MLR.0b013e318270bad4
4. Social determinants of health. Healthy People 2030. Accessed March 22, 2022. https://health.gov/healthypeople/objectives-and-data/social-determinants-health
5. Braddock M, Lapidus G, Gregorio D, Kapp M, Banco L. Population, income, and ecological correlates of child pedestrian injury. Pediatrics. 1991;88(6):1242-1247.
6. McClure R, Kegler S, Davey T, Clay F. Contextual determinants of childhood injury: a systematic review of studies with multilevel analytic methods. Am J Public Health. 2015;105(12):e37-e43. doi:10.2105/ajph.2015.302883
7. Brooks-Gunn J, Duncan GJ, Aber JL, eds. Neighborhood Poverty, Volume 2: Policy Implications in Studying Neighborhoods. Russell Sage Foundation; 1997.
8. Kersten EE, Adler NE, Gottlieb L, et al. Neighborhood child opportunity and individual-level pediatric acute care use and diagnoses. Pediatrics. 2018;141(5):e20172309. doi:10.1542/peds.2017-2309
9. Pollack CE, Du S, Blackford AL, Herring B. Experiment to decrease neighborhood poverty had limited effects on emergency department use. Health Aff (Millwood). 2019;38(9):1442-1450. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2019.00452
10. National action plan for child injury prevention; an agenda to prevent injuries and promote the safety of children and adolescents in the United States. CDC. 2012. Accessed June 17, 2021. https://www.cdc.gov/safechild/nap/index.html
11. Irizarry CR, Hardigan PC, Kenney MGM, et al. Prevalence and ethnic/racial disparities in the distribution of pediatric injuries in South Florida: implications for the development of community prevention programs. Inj Epidemiol. 2017;4(1):12. doi:10.1186/s40621-017-0108-9
12. Ballesteros MF, Williams DD, Mack KA, Simon TR, Sleet DA. The epidemiology of unintentional and violence-related injury morbidity and mortality among children and adolescents in the United States. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018;15(4):616. doi:10.3390/ijerph15040616
13. Flanagan BE, Hallisey EJ, Adams E, Lavery A. Measuring community vulnerability to natural and anthropogenic hazards: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s social vulnerability index. J Environ Health. 2018;80(10):34-36.
14. Brisendine AE, Sharma P, Liu Y, et al. Community-level social determinants of health and well-child visits among Alabama Medicaid enrollees. Popul Health Manag. 2022;25(2):209-217. doi:10.1089/pop.2021.0258
15. Data downloads. Health Resources & Services Administration. Accessed March 21, 2021. https://data.hrsa.gov/data/download
16. Ballard DW, Price M, Fung V, et al. Validation of an algorithm for categorizing the severity of hospital emergency department visits. Med Care. 2010;48(1):58-63. doi:10.1097/MLR.0b013e3181bd49ad
17. Becker DJ, Blackburn J, Morrisey MA, et al. Co-payments and the use of emergency department services in the children’s health insurance program. Med Care Res Rev. 2013;70(5):514-530. doi:10.1177/1077558713491501
18. Billings J, Parikh N, Mijanovich T. Emergency department use: the New York story. Issue Brief (Commonw Fund). 2000;(434):1-12.
19. Billings J, Parikh N, Mijanovich T. Emergency department use in New York City: a substitute for primary care? Issue Brief (Commonw Fund). 2000(433):1-5.
20. Borse NN, Gilchrist J, Dellinger AM, Rudd RA, Ballesteros MF, Sleet DA. CDC Childhood Injury Report: Patterns of Unintentional Injuries Among 0-19 Year Olds in the United States, 2000-2006. CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; 2008.
21. Macy ML, Zonfrillo MR, Cook LJ, et al; Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network. Patient- and community-level sociodemographic characteristics associated with emergency department visits for childhood injury. J Pediatr. 2015;167(3):711-718.e1-4. doi:10.1016/j.jpeds.2015.05.047
22. Oates GR, Hamby BW, Stepanikova I, et al. Social determinants of adherence to pulmonary rehabilitation for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. COPD. 2017;14(6):610-617. doi:10.1080/15412555.2017.1379070
23. Monuteaux MC, Lee L, Fleegler E. Children injured by violence in the United States: emergency department utilization, 2000-2008. Acad Emerg Med. 2012;19(5):535-540. doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.2012.01341.x
24. Carter PM, Cook LJ, Macy ML, et al; Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). Individual and neighborhood characteristics of children seeking emergency department care for firearm injuries within the PECARN network. Acad Emerg Med. 2017;24(7):803-813. doi:10.1111/acem.13200
25 Blackburn J, Becker DJ, Sen B, Morrisey MA, Caldwell C, Menachemi N. Characteristics of low-severity emergency department use among CHIP enrollees. Am J Manag Care. 2013;19(12):e391-e399.
26. Wallace J, Moran R, Bretzin A, Hileman B, Huang GS. Examination of racial disparities in adolescents seen in the emergency department for head, neck, or brain injury. J Emerg Med. 2020;59(6):783-794. doi:10.1016/j.jemermed.2020.07.002
27. Skinner AC, Slifkin RT. Rural/urban differences in barriers to and burden of care for children with special health care needs. J Rural Health. 2007;23(2):150-157. doi:10.1111/j.1748-0361.2007.00082.x
28. Greenwood-Ericksen MB, Kocher K. Trends in emergency department use by rural and urban populations in the United States. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(4):e191919. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.1919
29. Li G, Grabowski JG, McCarthy ML, Kelen GD. Neighborhood characteristics and emergency department utilization. Acad Emerg Med. 2003;10(8):853-859. doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.2003.tb00628.x
30. Sheats KJ, Irving SM, Mercy JA, et al. Violence-related disparities experienced by black youth and young adults: opportunities for prevention. Am J Prev Med. 2018;55(4):462-469. doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2018.05.017
Social Determinants of Health and Emergency Department Utilization in Alabama Children’s Health Insurance Program
Pradeep Sharma, MS, MBA
Community social determinants of health such as rurality and low socioeconomic status moderate the association between an individual’s race and emergency care use.
ABSTRACT
Objectives: Injuries are the leading cause of death among children and youth in the United States, representing a major concern to society and to the public and private health plans covering pediatric patients. Data from ALL Kids, Alabama’s Children’s Health Insurance Program, were used to evaluate the relationship between community-level social determinants of health (SDOH) and pediatric emergency department (ED) use and differences in these associations by age and race.
Study Design: This was a retrospective, pooled cross-sectional analysis.
Methods: We used ALL Kids data to identify ED visits (injury and all-cause) among children who were enrolled at any time from 2015 to 2017. Exploratory factor analysis was used to categorize SDOH from 18 selected Census tract–level variables. Multilevel Poisson regression models were used to evaluate the effects of community and individual factors and their interactions.
Results: Census tract–level SDOH were grouped as low socioeconomic status (SES), urbanicity, and immigrant-density factors. Low SES and urbanicity factors were associated with ED visits (injury and all-cause). The low SES and urbanicity factors also moderated the association between race and ED visits (injury and all-cause).
Conclusions: The environment in which children live influences their ED use; however, the impact varies by age, race, and Census tract factors. Further studies should focus on specific community factors to better understand the relationship among SDOH, individual characteristics, and ED utilization.
Am J Manag Care. 2023;29(3):159-164. https://doi.org/10.37765/ajmc.2023.89330
Takeaway Points
Injuries are the leading cause of death among children and youth in the United States.1 According to the CDC, for every child injury death, 25 children are hospitalized and another 925 are treated in an emergency department (ED).2 Pediatric injuries represent a major concern to society and to the public and private health plans covering pediatric patients.
Unlike ambulatory care–sensitive conditions, injuries are less amenable to prevention through clinical interventions3 and are more likely to be related to patient characteristics and social and environmental factors. The CDC defines social determinants of health (SDOH) as “the conditions in the environments where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship, and age that affect a wide range of health, functioning, and quality-of-life outcomes and risks.”4 In the United States, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status (SES), and environmental characteristics have been shown to be risk factors for childhood injury.5-7 Minority racial/ethnic status and community-level socioeconomic disadvantage have also been linked to higher overall pediatric ED use, perhaps due to lack of access to a usual source of care.8 However, in the presence of financial, physical, and cultural barriers to seeking care, the SDOH associated with increased risk of pediatric injury may not lead to more ED use.9 A more nuanced understanding of the factors that confer increased risk of injury and factors that are barriers to seeking health care among children may inform health care and community-level interventions to address and mitigate these risks.
This study adds to the literature by exploring associations between individual- and community-level characteristics and ED visits among publicly insured children in Alabama. In 2012, the CDC released the National Action Plan for Child Injury Prevention, emphasizing the importance of data-driven research as a key component of a national strategy to reduce childhood injury.10 In some states, health systems have launched interventions targeting pediatric injury prevention at the community level.11 By focusing on a state with one of the highest rates of childhood injury,12 this study uses data from ALL Kids, Alabama’s Children’s Health Insurance Program, to evaluate the relationship between community-level SDOH and pediatric ED use and differences in these associations by age and race.
METHODS
Patient and Public Involvement
Neither patients nor the public were involved in the design, conduct, reporting, or dissemination of this research. This work was approved by the University of Alabama at Birmingham Institutional Review Board (record No. IRB-300003138).
Data and Study Cohort
This study used administrative data from ALL Kids, focused on children enrolled at any time from 2015 to 2017. During this time, ALL Kids coverage was available in 12-month enrollment periods to Alabama children younger than 19 years with family incomes from 146% to 317% of the federal poverty level (FPL).
Individual characteristics, including enrollee age, gender, race, and cost-sharing group, were obtained from administrative data. Race and ethnicity are social constructs but are used as a lens through which to study disparities in health care. We used the following self-reported racial categories: American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, more than 1 race, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, White, and unknown or not reported. The proportions of respondents in the categories other than Black or African American and White were small, so they were combined into an “other” category. Based on previous literature,13,14 18 Census tract–level variables were selected and used for exploratory factor analysis (EFA) to capture community SDOH (eAppendix Table 1 [eAppendix available at ajmc.com]). Home addresses at time of enrollment were used to map children to their Census tract. County-level health resource factors, including the number of pediatricians and the number of total hospital beds per 1000 population, were obtained from Area Health Resource Files.15
Outcomes
The primary health outcome measures were counts of ED visits (injury and all-cause) by enrollee and calendar year. The validated16 New York University (NYU) ED Classification Algorithm, previously used with ALL Kids data,17 was employed to classify common primary ED discharge diagnoses as having varying probabilities of falling into 1 of 4 severity categories.18,19
Statistical Analysis
In this pooled cross-sectional analysis, we used EFA on the Census tract–level variables to reduce complexity and potential collinearity in the models and categorize SDOH.14 Multilevel models were used to explore the association between SDOH and injury ED visits using individual-, Census tract–, and county-level factors. Detailed descriptions of the EFA and multilevel modeling are provided in the eAppendix.
Because the causes and patterns of injuries may be different for younger vs older children, we estimated age-stratified models for children younger than 10 years or 10 years and older.20,21 Other individual covariates included race, gender, and 3 income-based eligibility groups (low-fee, 146%-156% FPL; fee, 157%-208% FPL; and expansion, 209%-317% FPL). Due to small sample size, a fourth no-fee group, composed of Native American children federally exempt from all forms of cost sharing, was combined with the “other” race category of the low-fee group, avoiding issues of multicollinearity.
To explore possible intersectionalities between race and community characteristics, we estimated models containing interaction terms between individual race and SDOH categories. To simplify the interactions between race and SDOH, we categorized each factor into deciles that were included as continuous variables in the model.22
All models were estimated using multilevel mixed-effect Poisson regression, with robust standard errors accounting for the interdependency of observations throughout the study period. Results are presented as incidence rate ratios (IRRs). A 2-sided P value less than .05 was considered significant. All analyses were performed using Stata 16 (StataCorp).
RESULTS
Results From EFA and Summary of Cohort Characteristics
Three SDOH categories were generated by EFA of 18 Census tract–level variables (eAppendix Table 2 and eAppendix Figure): (1) low SES, (2) urbanicity (high degree of urbanization), and (3) immigrant density (high density of recent immigrants). Distributions of individual characteristics across quintiles of SDOH are summarized in eAppendix Table 3.
Results for Injury ED Visits
Low SES was positively associated with injury-related ED visits (Table 1) only among children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.022; P < .01), whereas urbanicity showed negative association in both age groups (≥ 10 years: IRR, 0.987; P < .05; < 10 years: IRR, 0.989; P < .05). No significant associations were observed between immigrant density and injury ED visits.
Black or African American children younger than 10 years had a lower rate of injury ED visits than White children, but there was no significant difference for children 10 years and older. Girls were less likely to have injury ED visits than boys across both age groups. A 1-year increase in age was positively associated with injury ED visits for children younger than 10 years but negatively associated for children 10 years and older.
In models with interaction terms between low SES and race for injury ED visits, low SES remained significant for children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.031; P < .01), whereas the interaction between low SES and Black or African American race was not statistically significant (IRR, 0.981; P = .095). This indicated that although the rate of injury ED visits increased with higher deciles of low SES among children 10 years and older, the increase could be smaller for Black or African American than White children, implying a widening gap between the races at higher deciles of low SES.
In the interaction models, urbanicity remained significant and negative for both age groups, but the interaction of Black or African American race and urbanicity was positive and significant only for children 10 years and older (IRR, 1.036; P < .01). Although Black or African American race and urbanicity were both associated with lower rates of injury ED visits, the interaction term suggested that Black or African American children 10 years and older who live in more urban areas face increased risk of injury relative to White children.
Results for All-Cause ED Visits
Low SES was positively associated with all-cause ED visits for both age groups (Table 2). No significant associations between urbanicity or immigrant density and all-cause ED visits were observed in any model specifications.
Compared with White children, Black or African American children had a higher rate of all-cause ED visits in the group younger than 10 years, whereas children who were neither White nor Black or African American had a lower rate of ED visits in both age groups. Girls 10 years and older were more likely to have all-cause ED visits than younger girls. Age was negatively associated with all-cause ED visits in the group younger than 10 years but positively associated in the group 10 years and older.
In models with interaction terms, the interaction between Black or African American race and urbanicity was significant for both age groups. Again, higher levels of urbanicity had stronger associations with all-cause ED visits for Black or African American children than for White children.
DISCUSSION
In this multilevel analysis using Alabama ALL Kids data and Census tract–level measures of SDOH, we observed statistically significant associations between low SES and urbanicity and ED visits (injury and all-cause). We found that low SES was associated with greater risk of ED visits among older children, whereas low urbanicity (rurality) was associated with greater risk of ED visits for all children in multivariate models.
This study found that the rate of injury-related ED visits among Black or African American children and children who are neither White nor Black or African American is lower compared with that among White children, which is counter to findings of other studies.23,24 ED use by racial and ethnic minority children is often ascribed to their having limited access to primary care, but ALL Kids enrollees have access to the entire Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama provider network, which is the largest private health insurance provider in Alabama. Despite the better accessibility of the provider network, the financial, physical, and cultural barriers to seek care still exist. However, improved access to primary care has been shown to improve efficient use of ED services for ALL Kids.25 Besides, in models with interactions, the results showed a trend whereby Black or African American children 10 years and older living in high-poverty communities are at decreased risk of injury-related ED visits compared with White children living in high-poverty communities. There are concerns that non-White children in low-SES communities may be less likely to seek ED services even when there is a need,26 and it may be conjectured that that underutilization may contribute to the relatively low rate of injury-related ED visits among Black or African American children in this study. The findings of this study suggest the need for further investigation into the underlying causes of observed differences in ED utilization by race and SDOH.
The negative associations observed between urbanicity and ED visits support findings of previous studies that children in rural areas have more unmet medical needs and ED dependence.27,28 However, increased urbanicity was associated with differential increases in ED visits for Black or African American children relative to White children. This is congruent with the findings of Li et al,29 who found that predominantly African American communities had higher ED utilization rates when the ED was located within 0.5 miles of a patient’s residence. For injury ED visits, this study’s findings are consistent with well-documented exposure to community-level violence among urban African American youth.30
Compared with injury ED visits, the reasons for all-cause ED visits are more heterogeneous. Previous studies showed that the accessibility of routine care may have different impacts on ED use for different reasons.3,8 This may explain the discrepancy in our findings between injury ED visits and all-cause ED visits. Further studies focusing on disease-specific ED use could help illustrate the association between SDOH and ED use.
Limitations
This study had limitations. First, the NYU ED algorithm does not specifically assess severity. From the administrative data, we cannot determine whether differences in ED utilization among groups are the result of differences in injury incidence or severity, differences in thresholds for seeking ED services, or differences in diagnosis by physicians. Further study should analyze ED utilization by stratifying the injury type and severity. Second, the use of EFA prevented the examination of associations between injury ED visits and specific community factors. Third, results may be sensitive to what community-level variables were originally available in the data set for potential inclusion through EFA, and the EFA method does not allow researchers to choose variables to include in each factor. Fourth, the age-stratified analysis is limited to 2 broad age groups, whereas the causes of injury and the main reasons for ED visits may vary by finer age categories; hence, future studies with larger sample sizes should do more granular analysis by age. Fifth, we did not control for baseline health status measures in the models. To include controls for the presence of chronic health conditions would require the use of a fixed period of prior coverage, which would further restrict our already limited sample. Finally, this study focused on ALL Kids enrollees of Alabama. Caution must be used when extrapolating results to other states.
CONCLUSIONS
This study provides new evidence of the associations between SDOH and ED utilization among ALL Kids enrollees in Alabama. These findings suggest that the environments in which the children live influence their ED use, although the nature of the influence varies across different demographic groups and Census tract factors. Further studies should focus on specific community factors to better understand the relationship among area-level factors, individual factors, and the risk of childhood injury.
Author Affiliations: Department of Health Policy and Organization, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham (YL, PS, DJB, AB, JM, MAM, BS), Birmingham, AL; Department of Health Policy and Management, Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, Indiana University–Purdue University (JB, NM), Indianapolis, IN; Alabama Department of Public Health Bureau of Children’s Health Insurance (TS), Montgomery, AL.
Source of Funding: This work was funded by the Alabama Department of Public Health (C90116151).
Author Disclosures: Ms Sanders reports previous employment with Alabama Children’s Health Insurance. The remaining authors report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.
Authorship Information: Concept and design (YL, AB, MAM, JB, NM, TS, BS); acquisition of data (DJB, TS); analysis and interpretation of data (YL, PS, DJB, AB, MAM, JB, BS); drafting of the manuscript (YL, AB, JM, MAM, BS); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (YL, PS, DJB, AB, JM, MAM, JB, NM, BS); statistical analysis (YL, PS); obtaining funding (DJB); administrative, technical, or logistic support (JM, NM, TS); and supervision (BS).
Address Correspondence to: Ye Liu, MD, MPH, Department of Health Policy and Organization, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1665 University Blvd, Birmingham, AL 35294. Email: yeliu@uab.edu.
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