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Survey examines emergency department visit rates among people experiencing homelessness

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Survey examines emergency department visit rates among people experiencing homelessness
Photo by Prakhar Singh / Unsplash

A recent survey report examined how often people visit emergency departments in the United States. It specifically looked at whether a person's housing status—being homeless or not—was connected to their rate of emergency department visits. The report did not provide the actual numbers or rates from the survey, so we don't know what the survey found about any differences.

This was a survey report, not a detailed research study. It did not follow people over time or control for other factors that might affect emergency department use, like health conditions or access to other care. The report also did not mention any safety concerns related to the visits.

Because the report did not share its specific findings or methods, we cannot say if homelessness is linked to higher or lower emergency department use. Readers should know this survey provides very limited information. It highlights an important topic for future research but does not give us clear answers about current patterns of care.

What this means for you:
A survey looked at ER visits and homelessness but did not report specific findings, so no conclusions can be drawn.
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