Title: Characteristics of Clients Using a Free Health Center
1Characteristics of Clients Using a Free Health
Center
2About the CCCHC
- Champaign County Christian Health Center is a
not for profit health center founded in 2003. Our
mission is to show and share the love of Jesus
Christ to our neighbors of Champaign County by
providing holistic, free, and quality health care
services. - 507 S. Second St.Suite 2EChampaign, IL
61820ccchc2003_at_yahoo.com -
- http//www.ccchc2003.org
3About the CCCHC
- Provides
- primary care
- immunizations
- physicals
- screenings
- educational events
- prayer and support
4 Problem Objectives
- Problem
- A large population of uninsured and underinsured
- Limited access to healthcare
- Over-utilization of Emergency Department (ED)
- Objectives
- Assess the clients of the Champaign County
Christian Health Center - Demographic Characteristics
- Health Service Utilization
5 Methodology
- Self-reported client surveys completed before
receiving services from the Champaign County
Christian Health Center (CCCHC) - Ten optional questions that included demographic
information and health service utilization - English and Spanish translations provided
- 970 cases reviewed
- Secondary data analysis using (SPSS) Statistical
Package for the Social Sciences
6Scholarly literature review of free health clinic
clientele
- 75 of patients uninsured
- Over half lived within 200 of federal poverty
level - Minorities make up 60 of the uninsured American
population - Minority populations face
- lower quality of health care
- lack access to care
Williams, David R and Jackson, Pamela Braboy
Social Sources of Racial Disparities in Health,
(2005, March/April), Health Affairs Vol. 24(2)
Nadkarni, M. M. Philbrick, J. T. (2005). Free
clinics A national survey. American Journal of
the Medical Sciences, 330(1), 25-31.
7http//quickfacts.census.gov/gfd/states/17/17019.h
tml
8http//quickfacts.census.gov/gfd/states/17/17019.h
tml
9http//quickfacts.census.gov/gfd/states/17/17019.h
tml
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11Average National Emergency Department Utilization
Statistics
- In 2005, 115.3 million visits to EDs (39.6
visits per 100 people). - An average of 30,000 visits per ED, a 31
increase from 1995. - 41.9 million injury-related ED visits (14.4
visits per 100 people)
Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
12Costs of ED Visits
- In 2003, average expenditure for an ED visit was
560 - Average of 121 for an office-based visit
- Highest average ED expense for ages 4564 at 832
- ED expenses were slightly higher for males than
for females
13Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
14Scholarly literature findings on emergency
department utilization among uninsured
- 25 patients visiting EDs as primary source of
health care - 15-25 using ED as only source of care
- Strongest indicator of ED use is insurance status
Hong, Rick, Baumann, Brigitte M. and Boudreaux,
Edwin D ( 2007) The emergency department for
routine healthcare Race/ethnicity, socioeconomic
status, and perceptual factors Electronic
Version Journal of Emergency Medicine Vol.
32, Issue 2, pp 149-158
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17Top Patient Reasons for Emergency Department Visit
Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
18Urgency of ED Conditions National vs. CCCHC
Unknown
Urgent
Urgent
Non-urgent
Non-urgent
plt.001
Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
19Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
20N/A
N/A
N/A
Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
21(No Transcript)
22Nawar EW, Niska RW, Xu J ( 2007) National
Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey 2005
Emergency Department Summary. Advance data from
vital and health statistics no. 386. National
Center for Health Statistics http//www.cdc.gov/nc
hs/data/ad/ad396.pdf
23Limitations
- Self-reported data
- Difficulties in interpretation
- Surveys were not completed by all clients
- Surveys were collected over a two year period
without date-stamping
24Conclusions
- High rate of minority, female head of household,
and patients ages 25-64 using the free clinic - CCCHC patients followed national ED utilization
trends among uninsured - Implications for ED overcrowding
25References
- 1.) Cardarelli, R. Chiapa, A. (2007). Educating
primary care clinicians about health disparities.
- Osteopathic Medicine and Primary Care, 1(5).
Retrieved June 9, 2008 from - http//www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcg
i?artid1808470. - 2.) Cheong, P. H., Feeley, T. H. Servoss, T.
(2007). Understanding health inequalities for - uninsured Americans A population-wide survey.
Journal of Health Communication, 12(3), 285-300. - 3.) Davidson, R. A., Guancola, A., Gast, A., Ho,
J. Waddell, R. (2003). Â Evaluation of access, a
- primary care program for indigent patients
Inpatient and emergency room utilization.
 Journal of Community - Health, 28, 59-64.
- 4.) Diesburg-Stanwood, A., Scott, J., Oman, K.
Whitehill, C. (2004). Nonemergent ED patients - referred to community resources after medical
screening examination Characteristics, medical
condition after 72 hours, - and use of follow-up services. Journal of
Emergency Nursing, 30(4), 312-317. - 5.) Hong, R., Baumann, B. M. Boudreaux, E. D.
(2007). The emergency department for routine - healthcare Race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status,
and perceptual factors. Journal of Emergency
Medicine, 32(2), 149 - 158.
- 6.) Machlin, S. R. (2006). Expenses for a
hospital emergency room visit. Agency for
Healthcare - Research and Quality, 111. Retrieved June 11,
2008 from - http//www.meps.ahrq.gov/mepsweb/data_files/public
ations/st111/stat111.pdf. - 7.) Mayer, G. G., Villaire, M. Connell, J.
(2005). Ten recommendations for reducing - unnecessary emergency department visits. Journal
of Nursing Administration, 35(10), 428-430.
26- Compiled by Jennifer Byelick (2008)