Journal article

Emergency department mental health presentations by people born in refugee source countries: An epidemiological logistic regression study in a Medicare Local region in Australia

JC Enticott, IH Cheng, G Russell, J Szwarc, G Braitberg, A Peek, G Meadows

Australian Journal of Primary Health | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2015

Abstract

This study investigated if people born in refugee source countries are disproportionately represented among those receiving a diagnosis of mental illness within emergency departments (EDs). The setting was the Cities of Greater Dandenong and Casey, the resettlement region for one-twelfth of Australia's refugees. An epidemiological, secondary data analysis compared mental illness diagnoses received in EDs by refugee and non-refugee populations. Data was the Victorian Emergency Minimum Dataset in the 2008-09 financial year. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression created predictive models for mental illness using five variables: age, sex, refugee background, interpreter use and preferr..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Monash University Human Research Ethics Committee


Awarded by Southern Health Human Research Ethics Committee


Funding Acknowledgements

Refugee Health Research Consortium partners: South Eastern Melbourne Medicare Local, Monash University, Monash Health, AMES Settlement, Foundation House, Victorian Department of Health, Victorian Department of Human Services. Ethics approval was obtained from both the Monash University Human Research Ethics Committee (project no. CF10/1638 - 2010000907) and Southern Health Human Research Ethics Committee (project no. 10253 L).