• Br J Gen Pract · Jan 2000

    Do practice-based preventive child health services affect the use of hospitals? A cross-sectional study of hospital use by children in east London.

    • S Hull, C Harvey, P Sturdy, Y Carter, J Naish, F Pereira, C Ball, and L Parsons.
    • Department of General Practice and Primary Care, St Bartholomew's and the Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry. s.a.hull@qmw.ac.uk
    • Br J Gen Pract. 2000 Jan 1; 50 (450): 31-6.

    BackgroundAcute paediatric admissions have risen steadily over the past 20 years. During the same period, practice-based child health clinics have increased, although provision is less common in areas of deprivation where hospital use is greatest.AimTo investigate the contribution of practice-based, preventive child health services to rates of hospital utilisation in children under five years of age.MethodA cross-sectional retrospective study examining practice variations in paediatric acute admissions, outpatient referrals, and accident and emergency (A&E) department attendances in the East London and the City Health authority, including all 164 practices in the inner-city boroughs of Hackney, Newham, Tower Hamlets, and the City of London. The main outcome measures were practice-based paediatric hospital attendance rates, for discrete age and sex bands, for the year to 31 March 1996.ResultsHospital use varied with age and sex, with the rates being highest for the youngest children and for boys. The median A&E attendance rate (including reattendances) for boys up to one year of age was 897 per thousand children per practice. In east London, 62% of practices are registered for child health surveillance and 71% provide a child health clinic. Practice approval for child health surveillance, and the provision of child health clinics, did not account for differences between practices in hospital use, but proportionally greater health visiting hours were significantly related to lower rates of emergency hospital admission by young children. Multivariate analyses revealed that up to 23% of the variation between practice admission rates could be explained by health visiting hours.ConclusionsWe found significant associations between the amount of health visiting time available to the practice population and rates of acute admission and outpatient referral among children up to five years of age. These findings suggest that increasing health visitor provision could contribute to lower paediatric emergency admission and outpatient referral rates. A small change would have a significant effect, particularly among the youngest children, given that during the study year 10,000 children under two years of age in east London were either admitted or referred to hospital.

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