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The Association of the Frequency of Community Paramedicine Sessions and 9-1-1 Calls in Ontario Subsidized Housing: A Multilevel Analysis

Older adults, especially those who are of low socioeconomic status, experience higher rates of mortality and chronic disease. As a result, older adults are frequent users of emergency medical service (EMS), comprising approximately 38-48% of all EMS calls. In response to higher EMS demands, community paramedicine has recently emerged as a non-traditional model whereby paramedics provide care in a community- based setting. CP@clinic is a community paramedicine programme that focuses on disease prevention and health promotion with the goal of reducing EMS demand. Given the knowledge that older adults who live in subsidized housing have poorer health outcomes, CP@clinic has been implemented in several subsidized housing building across Ontario. A program evaluation of CP@clinic is currently underway to make recommendations to paramedic partner stakeholders regarding program delivery. As part of this evaluation, I sought to understand the association of the number of CP@clinic sessions held per month and EMS calls per apartment unit. De-identified EMS call data were collated from 9 paramedic services across Ontario from February 2015 to December 2019. I conducted a three-level multilevel regression analysis, with EMS calls per apartment unit as the outcome. The primary analysis found that a one-session increase in the number of sessions held per month was associated with an average 2.4% higher incident rate of EMS calls, adjusted for building size. A secondary analysis, with the number of sessions per month as a categorical variable, revealed that two CP@clinic sessions per month had the smallest association with EMS calls, adjusted for building size. Based on these results, it is recommended that paramedic services offer two or more CP@clinic sessions per month. Future research should investigate the factors that impact each services’ ability to offer the CP@clinic programme. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Older adults experience high rates of chronic diseases, especially older adults living in subsidized housing. Community paramedicine has recently emerged as a way of addressing the healthcare needs of older adults living in subsidized housing, while simultaneously decreasing the burden on EMS. CP@clinic is a community paramedicine programme aimed at improving the health of older adults and reducing the demand on EMS. To make recommendations to the paramedic services operating CP@clinic, I sought to understand the association between the frequency of CP@clinic sessions and the number of EMS calls per apartment unit in Ontario. Based on the results, CP@clinic sessions were associated with higher incident rate of EMS calls, after accounting for building size, reflecting the trend of rising EMS calls in Ontario. Overall, paramedic services may see improved EMS call outcomes with two or more CP@clinic sessions per month but should offer the programme according to their organizational capacity.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/26983
Date January 2021
CreatorsCooper, Rhiannon
ContributorsAgarwal, Gina, Health Research Methodology
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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