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Alcohol‐related harm in emergency departments: linking to subsequent hospitalizations to quantify under‐reporting of presentations
Author(s) -
Sims Scott,
Preen David,
Pereira Gavin,
Fatovich Daniel,
Livingston Michael,
O'Donnell Melissa
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1111/add.15284
Subject(s) - emergency department , medicine , harm , alcohol , injury prevention , demography , suicide prevention , occupational safety and health , young adult , human factors and ergonomics , poison control , emergency medicine , medical emergency , psychiatry , gerontology , psychology , social psychology , biochemistry , chemistry , pathology , sociology
Title Alcohol‐related harm in emergency departments: linking to subsequent hospitalizations to quantify under‐reporting of presentations. Aims To quantify the proportion of emergency department (ED) presentations that could be identified as alcohol‐related when linking to a patient's subsequent hospitalization, compared with using ED data alone, and to assess that comparison according to the change in alcohol harm rates over time and potential variations within subpopulations. Design A retrospective study using linked hospital administrative data to identify ED patients who had subsequent alcohol‐related hospitalizations. Setting Western Australia. Participants A total of 533 816 Western Australian young people (246 866 females and 286 950 males), aged 12–24 years. Measurements Whether or not presentations of young people to ED could be identified as alcohol‐related, and for those that were not, how many had a subsequent alcohol‐related hospitalization. Rates and proportions of alcohol‐related harm for both methods of ascertainment were estimated by sex and Aboriginality across different age groups. Findings Alcohol‐related hospitalizations that followed an initial presentation at ED allowed the identification of an additional 19 994 alcohol‐related presentations (95% increase). Linking to additional hospitalization information also resulted in significant variation in alcohol‐related harm trends. In particular, trends in alcohol‐related ED presentations for 21–24‐year‐old males were stable to slightly increasing using only ED data, but decreased after linking with hospitalization data ( P < 0.05). Similarly, trends among Aboriginal persons aged 21–24 shifted from increasing using only ED data to being stable in comparison to presentations using subsequent hospitalizations ( P < 0.05). Conclusions Among young people in Western Australia, twice as many emergency department presentations could be identified as being alcohol‐related using diagnosis information from subsequent hospitalizations compared with emergency department data alone. When supplemented with hospitalization data, trends in alcohol‐related harm presentations become significantly different within some subpopulations compared with using emergency department presentation data alone.