We conducted a retrospective study of the accesses to the Emergency Department registered from January 2000 to December 2014 in 5 major hospitals in the Metropolitan Area of Rome. We extrapolated data relating to patients of Moroccan origin from about 5 million total accesses, so we compared with Italians data which, in the same period, came to ED. The Moroccan population is distinguished by a larger number of diagnoses belonging to the ICD-9 code of Infectious Diseases and, more precisely, to Respiratory Infectious Diseases. There are also no differences in the assignment of such diagnoses to Moroccans with Italian citizenship, and this led to think that this could play an important role in the use of the ED and moreover that enrollment to the National Health Service may reduce its inappropriate use. Regarding to Degenerative Disorders, the result of our analysis is quite emblematic, showing that the accesses to the ED is due to Cardiovascular Diseases: 6.33% of Italians' accesses against 1.81% of Moroccans and 2.36% of Moroccans with Italian citizenship. The main explanation for this difference is, obviously, due to the age of the population: about 60% of Moroccans who accessed to ED was less than 40 years old. It is interesting how, in the field of ​​Cardiovascular Diseases, Moroccans have a lower percentage of diagnosis compared to Italians for acute diseases and a greater percentage of diagnoses for chronic diseases, suggesting once again that accesses to ED for migrants often is due to the inability to use the general services of the National Health Service. In conclusion, from the point of view of the Emergency Department, Migration Medicine still has Infectious Diseases as the main reason for access. Degenerative Disorders remain a prerogative of the Italians, but we could certainly assume that the Moroccan population would develop at some point with the aging.

Emergency Department as an epidemiological observatory of Human Mobility: the experience of the Moroccan population / Cedrone, M. C.; Iaccarino, Ciro; Baldini, E.; Cipollone, Lorena; Suppa, M.; Bertazzoni, G; De Vito, C.; Gazzaniga, V.; Grasso, F.; Guglielmelli, Emanuele; Iorio, S.; Londei, A.; Massetti, P.; Migliara, G.; Montanari, A.; Pugliese, F. R.; Ricciuto, GIULIO MARIA; Ruggieri, MARIA PIA; Susi, Beniamino; Villari, P. - In: ITALIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 2532-1285. - ELETTRONICO. - (2018). [10.23832/ITJEM.2018.018]

Emergency Department as an epidemiological observatory of Human Mobility: the experience of the Moroccan population

Cedrone M. C.;IACCARINO, CIRO;Baldini E.;CIPOLLONE, LORENA;Suppa M.;Bertazzoni G;De Vito C.;GAZZANIGA V.;GUGLIELMELLI, EMANUELE;Iorio S.;Londei A.;Massetti P.;Migliara G.;Montanari A.;RICCIUTO, GIULIO MARIA;RUGGIERI, MARIA PIA;SUSI, BENIAMINO;Villari P
2018

Abstract

We conducted a retrospective study of the accesses to the Emergency Department registered from January 2000 to December 2014 in 5 major hospitals in the Metropolitan Area of Rome. We extrapolated data relating to patients of Moroccan origin from about 5 million total accesses, so we compared with Italians data which, in the same period, came to ED. The Moroccan population is distinguished by a larger number of diagnoses belonging to the ICD-9 code of Infectious Diseases and, more precisely, to Respiratory Infectious Diseases. There are also no differences in the assignment of such diagnoses to Moroccans with Italian citizenship, and this led to think that this could play an important role in the use of the ED and moreover that enrollment to the National Health Service may reduce its inappropriate use. Regarding to Degenerative Disorders, the result of our analysis is quite emblematic, showing that the accesses to the ED is due to Cardiovascular Diseases: 6.33% of Italians' accesses against 1.81% of Moroccans and 2.36% of Moroccans with Italian citizenship. The main explanation for this difference is, obviously, due to the age of the population: about 60% of Moroccans who accessed to ED was less than 40 years old. It is interesting how, in the field of ​​Cardiovascular Diseases, Moroccans have a lower percentage of diagnosis compared to Italians for acute diseases and a greater percentage of diagnoses for chronic diseases, suggesting once again that accesses to ED for migrants often is due to the inability to use the general services of the National Health Service. In conclusion, from the point of view of the Emergency Department, Migration Medicine still has Infectious Diseases as the main reason for access. Degenerative Disorders remain a prerogative of the Italians, but we could certainly assume that the Moroccan population would develop at some point with the aging.
2018
Emergency Department, Human mobility, Health equity
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Emergency Department as an epidemiological observatory of Human Mobility: the experience of the Moroccan population / Cedrone, M. C.; Iaccarino, Ciro; Baldini, E.; Cipollone, Lorena; Suppa, M.; Bertazzoni, G; De Vito, C.; Gazzaniga, V.; Grasso, F.; Guglielmelli, Emanuele; Iorio, S.; Londei, A.; Massetti, P.; Migliara, G.; Montanari, A.; Pugliese, F. R.; Ricciuto, GIULIO MARIA; Ruggieri, MARIA PIA; Susi, Beniamino; Villari, P. - In: ITALIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 2532-1285. - ELETTRONICO. - (2018). [10.23832/ITJEM.2018.018]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1138092
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