Hospital-based Emergency Department Visits with Periapical Abscess: Updated Estimates from 7 Years
March 2019Volume 45, Issue
3, Pages 250–256
Abstract
Introduction
The
impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on the utilization of the
emergency department (ED) for periapical abscess (PA) is unknown. The
objectives of this study were to provide nationwide estimates of
hospital-based ED visits with PA and to examine the effect of the ACA on
the use of EDs for PAs.
Methods
We
performed a retrospective analysis of the Nationwide Emergency
Department Sample (NEDS) for 2008 to 2014. All ED visits with a
diagnosis of PA were selected. The International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision–Clinical Modification code was used to identify
PA. Patient- and hospital-level characteristics were examined.
Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the data.
Results
From
2008 to 2014, a total of 3,505,633 ED visits for PA occurred. The
proportion of ED visits with PA significantly increased over the study
period (from 460,260 in 2008 to 545,693 in 2014). Medicaid was the
primary payer (30.3%) and more than 40% were uninsured. Mean charge per
PA-related ED visit was $1080.50 and total PA-related ED charge across
the United States was $3.4 billion. Among those hospitalized following
PA-related ED visits, mean hospitalization charges were $34,245 and
total hospitalization charges were $5.7 billion.
Conclusion
Oral
health continues to be overlooked in health care. A large proportion of
ED visits with PA were made by those covered by Medicaid and uninsured.
The passing of the ACA has not reduced the number of ED visits with PA.
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