Sex differences in self-rated health and cardiovascular disease events
Sud M, Qiu F, Haldenby O, Islam S, Austin PC, Manuel D, Eurich D, Kaul P, Graham MM, Madan M, Huynh T, Spatz ES, Wijeysundera HC, Ko DT. JAMA Netw Open. 2026; 9(4): e264129.
Objectives — The authors comprehensively assessed healthcare utilization in a population-based sample of homeless adults and matched controls under a universal health insurance system.
Methods — The authors assessed healthcare utilization by 1165 homeless single men and women and adults in families and their age- and gender-matched low-income controls in Toronto, Ontario, from 2005 to 2009, using repeated-measures general linear models to calculate risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Results — Homeless participants had mean rates of 9.1 ambulatory care encounters (maximum = 141.1), 2.0 emergency department (ED) encounters (maximum = 104.9), 0.2 medical-surgical hospitalizations (maximum = 14.9), and 0.1 psychiatric hospitalizations per person-year (maximum = 4.8). Rate ratios for homeless participants compared with matched controls were 1.76 (95% CI = 1.58, 1.96) for ambulatory care encounters, 8.48 (95% CI = 6.72, 10.70) for ED encounters, 4.22 (95% CI = 2.99, 5.94) for medical-surgical hospitalizations, and 9.27 (95% CI = 4.42, 19.43) for psychiatric hospitalizations.
Conclusions — In a universal health insurance system, homeless people had substantially higher rates of ED and hospital use than general population controls; these rates were largely driven by a subset of homeless persons with extremely high-intensity usage of health services.
Hwang SW, Chambers C, Chiu S, Katic M, Kiss A, Redelmeier DA, Levinson W. Am J Public Health. 2013; 103(Suppl 2):S294-301. Epub 2013 Oct 22.
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