“… Predictors of Emergency Room and Hospital Utilization Among Adults with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 23 | Blaskowitz, M. G.; Hernandez, B.; Scott, P. W. | 2019 | USA | Adults with intellectual and developmental disability n: 597 | None | Age, gender, level of intellectual disability, chronic health problems, mental health diagnoses, polypharmacy, supported living arrangement, region | ER use for a medical/physical reason, hospitalization for a medical/physical reason, ER use for a behavioral/psychiatric reason, hospitalization for a behavioral/psychiatric reason | Prevalence study, secondary data: survey of medical charts | Predictors (environmental and individual risk factors) for ED use: institutionalized people are less likely to be admitted; people from deprived neighborhoods with a lack of care are less likely to visit the ED | 2. | Rate and characteristics of urgent hospitalization in persons with profound intellectual disabilities compared with general population 24 | Amor-Salamanca, A.; Menchon, J. M. | 2018 | Spain | Adults with severe/ profound intellectual disability n: 28 | Other hospitalized ED patients n: 83 | Gender, age, living arrangement | Emergency visits, admission to hospital after emergency visit | Retrospective cohort study, secondary data: discharge reports | No differences in the proportion of people with profound intellectual disability and controls admitted to hospital after their emergency visit; the median hospital stay was higher for people with profound intellectual disability s: 7.5 vs 4 days for controls |
3. | Factors associated with ambulatory care sensitive emergency department visits for South Carolina Medicaid members with intellectual disability 25 | McDermott, S.; Royer, J. |
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