Differences in health care access have increased over time because permanent hospital closures have been more frequent in neighborhoods of lower socioeconomic status and among hospitals with more publicly insured or uninsured patients.Reference Hsia, Srebotnjak and Kanzaria 1 , Reference Ko, Needleman and Derose 2 These hospital closures can represent public health emergencies for individuals with complex medical needs who lose access to their usual source of care.Reference Greenough, Lappi and Hsu 3 , Reference Sun, Mohanty and Weiss 4 Hospital closures also induce systemic stress, which can reveal the underlying dynamics of health care delivery systems and the behaviors of patients who access them.Reference Powell, Hanfling and Gostin 5 When these hospital closures occur in the midst of a disaster, their effects are magnified, and they can compound the difficulties of ensuring access to health resources during the disaster response and recovery periods.
During Hurricane Sandy, a public hospital, Bellevue Hospital Center (Bellevue), and a private hospital, the main campus of New York University Langone Medical Center (NYULMC), closed just blocks away from each other on the East Side of Manhattan.Reference Uppal, Evans and Chitkara 6 These 2 hospitals serve very different patient populations that were both challenged by the loss of their usual source for hospital-based care.Reference Lee, Smith and McStay 7 These closures added additional stress to the health management of many individuals already affected by the disaster.Reference Subaiya, Moussavi and Velasquez 8 Having survived the flood waters, nearby open hospitals were overwhelmed with emergency department (ED) volume from the facilities that closed.Reference Adalja, Watson and Bouri 9
This scenario provided an unfortunate natural experiment to analyze the patterns of health care use by patients at public versus private hospitals after a disaster.Reference McLafferty 10 To determine patient responses to hospital closures during Hurricane Sandy, we compared the redistribution of patients who historically accessed emergency care from Bellevue versus NYULMC. We then analyzed these patterns on the basis of the ownership of the surrounding hospitals and by the distance that patients traveled to access the facilities that remained open. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for disaster response when hospital closures complicate events like Hurricane Sandy.
Methods
Study Design and Setting
Our study was a retrospective observational cohort study that analyzed ED use in New York City (NYC) before and after Hurricane Sandy. We used the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS), an all-payer administrative claims database created by the New York State Department of Health (NYS DOH) that includes emergency visits at all NYS hospitals.Reference Quan 11 We excluded specialty hospitals with EDs that served specific patient populations (ie, cancer, orthopedic, psychiatric, veterans hospitals). In this database, we identified patients who had visited the ED at Bellevue or NYULMC prior to Hurricane Sandy and determined where they went for emergency care after the storm. Our study protocol was approved by the Data Protection Review Board at the NYS DOH and by the institutional review board at the University of Pennsylvania.
Selection of Participants
To track how the behavior of patients changed when these hospitals closed, we followed a group of patients with an established baseline pattern for accessing emergency care. We identified those ED users who had visited the ED at Bellevue or at NYULMC exclusively prior to the storm by using unique identifiers to identify visits among hospitals by the same patient. We designated a user of a specific ED as an individual who went to only one of these closed EDs and at least twice in the 5 years before Hurricane Sandy. We selected this narrowly defined cohort of ED users at Bellevue or NYULMC to ensure that our sample included patients with a demonstrated preference for a given ED.
Primary Outcome
The primary outcome of our study was the redistribution of these 2 patient cohorts to the nearby hospitals that remained open. We identified whether a patient, who historically had visited NYULMC or Bellevue before Hurricane Sandy, went elsewhere for emergency care after the storm. We calculated the proportion of these redistributed patients that the other NYC EDs received after Hurricane Sandy on October 30th, 2012, and prior to the reopening of a 911-receiving, freestanding ED at Bellevue on December 24th, 2012.Reference Lee, Smith and McStay 7
Other Measures
Patient Characteristics
To determine the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the patients in our cohorts, we analyzed the patient characteristics available in our dataset. These included patient age, gender, race/ethnicity, and type of health insurance. We compared these characteristics between NYULMC and Bellevue to identify significant differences.
Distances Between Patients and Hospitals
To determine the distances between individual patients and the hospitals they visited, we geocoded patient and hospital addresses by using ArcGIS Desktop Version 10.1 (Environmental Systems Resource Institute, Redlands, CA). We calculated the distance between patients and hospital locations by using Manhattan distance, which assumes a grid layout of city streets. This distance calculation is a reasonable estimate in NYC but would not be exactly equivalent to travel distance in areas that deviated significantly from a grid-like pattern.
Incremental Distance Traveled
To determine whether ED patients affected by closures traveled further for care after Hurricane Sandy, we calculated the incremental distance between patients and the hospitals they visited. To do this, we subtracted the distance between the patient’s address and the ED visited after the storm from the distance between the patient’s address and the ED at NYULMC or Bellevue. A positive incremental distance meant that the patient had to travel further for ED care; a negative distance meant that the patient lived closer to the ED they visited after the storm.
Distances Between Closed and Open Hospitals
We analyzed how the distance between closed and open hospitals correlated with the proportion of patients who redistributed to nearby EDs after the storm. We calculated distances between hospitals again by using Manhattan distance and then analyzed how proximity predicted the proportion of ED patients received by these nearby hospitals.
Size of Hospital Catchments
We mapped the hospital catchments for the EDs at Bellevue and NYULMC before the storm. To do this, we used patient addresses to locate all ED visits by NYC residents to Census tracts. Then, we calculated the share of ED visits by Census tract that went to each of the EDs at Bellevue and NYULMC in the 5 years before the storm to identify the geographic neighborhoods that these EDs had generally served. These hospital catchments provided context for the locations of the hospitals that received the highest proportion of redistributed ED patients.
Statistical Analysis
To compare the cohorts of ED users who were redistributed from the EDs that closed at Bellevue and NYULMC, t-tests were used for continuous variables (age), and Fisher’s exact test was used for categorical variables (gender, race, and insurance status) to identify significant differences in the patient characteristics from the 2 hospitals. A p-value of <0.0125 was considered significant to adjust for multiple comparisons.
To determine whether our patient cohorts had to travel further for ED care after the storm, we calculated median incremental distances for the overall cohort and the hospitals that received the most redistributed patients. We used a nonparametric, binomial exact method to determine 95% confidence intervals for these medians and also calculated the proportion of ED patients who had to travel farther for care after the storm.
We also compared the redistribution of ED patients by hospital to the proximity of these open hospitals to Bellevue and NYULMC. As hypothesized in prior studies, we believed that this relationship between distance and proportion of redistributed patients would be nonlinear.Reference Congdon 12 Thus, we performed a locally weighted regression by using a bandwidth of 80% to determine how the proximity of nearby hospitals predicted the proportion of redistributed ED patients that they had received. Finally, we evaluated whether the hospital ownership (public or private) affected whether these hospitals received more or fewer redistributed ED patients on the basis of the predictions of the locally weighted regression.
Sensitivity Analysis
To test our method for identifying ED patients with an established preference for care at Bellevue or NYULMC, we performed a sensitivity analysis on the number of times that a patient had to have only visited Bellevue or NYU in the 5-year period prior to the storm. We analyzed changing the cutoff to 1 or 3 prior visits to determine whether this frequency had an impact on the study results. We assessed this factor because an individual who visited Bellevue or NYULMC only 2 times in the 5 years prior might not have considered that institution their primary source of hospital-based emergency care.
Statistical analyses were performed in Stata 12.1 (StataCorp, College Station, TX).
Results
Characteristics of the Study Subjects
We identified 51,019 unique ED patients who had exclusively visited the ED at NYULMC with at least 2 ED visits in the 5-year pre-hurricane period. The overwhelming majority of these patients lived in Manhattan. Of these patients, we identified 469 who redistributed to nearby EDs in the 2-month period after the storm closed NYULMC. We identified 127,624 unique ED patients who had exclusively visited the ED at Bellevue with at least 2 ED visits in the pre-hurricane period. We found that a significant proportion of these patients lived in areas outside of Manhattan. Of these patients, we identified 1143 who redistributed to nearby EDs after the storm closed Bellevue.
Comparing patients redistributed from NYULMC and Bellevue after Hurricane Sandy, we found that patients at NYULMC, the private hospital, were more likely to be older, white, and privately insured or to have Medicare compared with patients at Bellevue, the public hospital, who were more likely to be younger, minority, and insured by Medicaid or uninsured (Table 1).
a Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; NYULMC, New York University Langone Medical Center.
Redistribution of ED Users
We mapped the redistribution of ED patients from NYULMC and Bellevue relative to their hospital catchments prior to the storm to explore where our cohort of patients went for ED care after the storm. Figure 1A depicts hospitals that received the highest proportions of the cohort of ED patients redistributed from NYULMC. The ED catchment for NYULMC was primarily focused in Manhattan, with only small pockets of patients living in other parts of NYC. Beth Israel Medical Center (Beth Israel), the nearest hospital, saw the highest proportion of these redistributed NYULMC ED patients at 32%. Most of the other NYULMC ED patients were distributed to other nearby hospitals in Manhattan.
In comparison, the overall hospital catchment for Bellevue’s ED was more widely distributed, with many patients living outside of Manhattan in other parts of NYC including Queens and Brooklyn (Figure 1B). Beth Israel, a private hospital, again saw the highest proportion of redistributed ED patients from Bellevue at 24%. But this proportion was much lower than the percentage of patients who had redistributed from NYULMC to Beth Israel. The rest of the Bellevue ED patients often went to other public hospitals (ie, Metropolitan Hospital Center, Elmhurst Hospital Center, and Woodhull Medical Center), rather than to other private hospitals that were nearer to Bellevue.
Incremental Distance Traveled
We also compared the incremental distance traveled by our cohort of redistributed ED patients to determine if they had to travel farther for emergency care after the storm (Table 2). For patients at NYULMC, we found that for the entire cohort of patients going to other NYC hospitals, the median incremental distance traveled was not significantly changed. When evaluating the closest hospital option, we found that redistributed patients at Beth Israel did not have to travel farther for care. However, for patients who went to some hospitals located farther away (ie, Lenox Hill Hospital and Weill-Cornell Medical Center), a higher proportion had to travel significantly longer distances to access emergency care.
a Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; NYULMC, New York University Langone Medical Center.
In comparison, when we analyzed patients who redistributed from Bellevue, we found that a majority of patients (70%) actually lived closer to the ED where they accessed emergency care after the storm. For hospitals located farther away from Bellevue outside of Manhattan in other parts of NYC, patients lived significantly closer to the ED where they went for care after the storm. The only hospital that received more patients who had to travel significantly farther for care was Metropolitan Hospital (64%), the nearest public hospital in Manhattan.
Redistribution by Hospital Proximity
Using locally weighted regression, we identified the correlation between the proportion of patients who redistributed from closed to open EDs and the proximity of these open hospitals to NYULMC and Bellevue (Figure 2). In both of these distributions, we found that there was an exponential decay in the proportion of redistributed ED patients and the proximity of the hospitals that remained open. However, for Bellevue, there were 3 significant outliers to the locally weighted regression, which were all public hospitals that received more patients than expected by the regression. In comparison, the redistribution of ED patients from NYULMC more closely followed the locally weighted regression, and proximity predicted the proportion of patients who redistributed from NYULMC to the nearby hospitals that remained open.
Sensitivity Analysis
In our sensitivity analysis, we used more strict and more relaxed inclusion criteria for the number of prior ED visits that patients had to have at each of the facilities prior to the storm. We did not find that changing the number of prior visits to 1 or 3 had a material effect on our study results. These changes had minor effects on the number of patients identified in the patient cohorts, and we found small differences in the absolute proportion of patients who redistributed to nearby hospitals. However, the overall trends we found were unchanged.
Discussion
Public health response to disasters must be shaped in a way that considers the differential access to care that exists in the United States.Reference Sarrazin, Campbell and Richardson 13 Broad generalizations about how to respond to medical needs during a disaster may not be appropriate for all types of patients, and specific interventions may be required to target particularly vulnerable populations.Reference Wharam, Zhang and Landon 14 We demonstrate that patient responses to hospital closures during disasters are significantly influenced by socioeconomic factors, especially insurance status.Reference Rudowitz, Rowland and Shartzer 15 These findings suggest that public health responses to events such as Hurricane Sandy must be tailored for the populations most at risk.Reference Levin, Berliner and Merdjanoff 16
In the past, more permanent hospital closures were typically small hospitals or in regions where there was an oversupply of hospital beds.Reference Kennedy and Dumas 17 , Reference Whiteis 18 However, more recent hospital closures have increasingly included large hospitals with high occupancy rates.Reference Cleverly 19 , Reference Landry and Landry 20 Continuation of these trends risks a health care system with little excess capacity or reserve to handle surges in hospital utilization associated with novel infections or disasters. 21 , 22 Hospitals with high proportions of Medicaid and uninsured patients experience hospital closures more frequently.Reference Hsia, Srebotnjak and Kanzaria 1 Thus, populations with lower socioeconomic status are especially prone to worsening of their already decreased access to care and poor outcomes.Reference Liu, Srebotnjak and Hsia 23 , Reference Hsia and Shen 24
When disasters strike, there are similarly subpopulations with different risk profiles for losing access to their medical care.Reference Post, Kasofsky and Hunte 25 As Hurricane Katrina demonstrated, populations with the worst access to care at baseline were particularly afflicted.Reference Rudowitz, Rowland and Shartzer 15 When disasters disrupt the existing infrastructure of the health care system, the underlying vulnerabilities of the system are revealed.Reference Sheppa, Stevens and Philbrick 26 , Reference Smith and Graffeo 27 During a disaster, even temporary hospital closures add significant additional strain to the system. Thus, methods by which to identify those patients who will have difficulty in meeting their medical needs after an event such as Hurricane Sandy are critical.Reference Teperman 28
Our study showed how patients with an established baseline of seeking emergency care at a public versus a private hospital redistributed to nearby hospitals that remained open after their usual place of care was temporarily closed. We found that proximity of nearby open hospitals was a very strong predictor for this redistribution of patients, and we demonstrated the shape of this relationship through our regression analysis. However, we also found that ED patients from the public hospital also preferentially accessed nearby open public hospitals even if they were located farther away than other private hospitals that remained open.
We investigated these findings by analyzing the incremental distance traveled by patients after a hospital closure and found that most patients traveling to the nearest hospital actually did not have to travel further for care. However, from prior studies, we found that the closest ED to the hospitals that closed (Beth Israel) was limited in its capacity to serve the overwhelming needs of displaced patients, and some of those patients who were not able to receive care at the nearest facility were forced to travel further for care.Reference Lee, Smith and McStay 7 , Reference Buchmueller, Jacobson and Wold 29
Patients with private insurance went to nearby EDs in proportions predicted by the proximity of the open EDs to their address of residence. However, a significant number of public patients who did not go to the closest ED preferentially accessed other public hospitals, thus bypassing closer private hospitals. On the basis of a subgroup analysis, we found that there were 2 different types of patients who went to Bellevue for emergency care: those who lived near the public hospital in the first place and those who even before the storm traveled from outside of Manhattan to access care at Bellevue, the public hospital.
Why this second group of patients traveled further for care before the storm is unclear. However, it may have been for convenience (ie, located closer to work or where they developed their injury or illness) or personal preference, or they may have traveled further for the care at Bellevue for specialty surgical, medical, or psychiatric services not offered at other public facilities in NYC.Reference Teperman 28
Upon the closure of the public hospital, proximity to nearby hospitals was still a strong predictor of how patients redistributed, but a significant proportion of the patients of the public hospital went to their closest public hospital instead of closer private hospitals. For those living far from Bellevue initially and outside of Manhattan, this pattern surprisingly meant shorter distances traveling to the nearest available public hospital.
For the majority of public hospital patients who lived in Manhattan and close to Bellevue initially (Table 3), the closure of Bellevue meant either going to the closest hospital at Beth Israel (48%) or the nearest public hospital in Manhattan (19%). Although the public transportation network had been temporarily compromised after the storm, some publicly insured patients in Manhattan still traveled further to access care at public facilities despite the presence of private hospitals that were closer. For patients in NYC, the number of available public hospitals at least meant that there were still options for care at public facilities even after Bellevue closed. In regions where public hospitals are few, the closure of a public hospital may have more significant consequences for those who regularly access care at public facilities.
a Abbreviation: ED, emergency department.
Policy Implications
To bolster public health response to disasters complicated by hospital closures, our study has several implications. 30 , Reference Redlener and Reilly 31 First, we demonstrate that the redistribution of patients from closed hospitals, at least acutely, follows a predictable pattern based on the proximity of nearby hospitals.Reference Lee, Sung and Ward 32 , Reference Henneman, Garb and Capraro 33 These findings can give critical insight as to where surges in patient volume will occur and can guide state and federal agencies in augmenting surge capacity after hospital closures or disasters.Reference McLafferty 34
Additionally, we demonstrate that patient redistribution secondarily depends on the types of hospitals and patients involved.Reference Rudge, Mohammed and Fillingham 35 This finding should inform the creation of hospital networks and health care coalitions that can share data before and after a storm, 36 because continuity of care depends on reliable access to medical records especially after a disaster or hospital closure.Reference Blair 37 , Reference Newman 38
Finally, directing an appropriate response to the medical needs that arise during a public health emergency requires an advance understanding of the medical needs that exist within communities of different socioeconomic backgrounds in order to optimally match resources to the specific needs of populations affected by disasters.Reference Lien, Raimo and Abramowitz 39 Our study demonstrates how hospital catchments can help to predict how and where patients will redistribute for emergency care after events that result in the loss of their usual source for hospital-based care.
Limitations
Our study was a retrospective observational cohort study, and these associations do not imply causation. Additionally, our study only analyzed those patients who were able to access emergency care after the storm; however, some individuals may have been unable to access emergency care during the disaster. Although our study analyzed the impact of the closure of 2 geographically proximate public and private hospitals, the study’s uniqueness limits generalizability of the study findings, because some regions of the country do not have public hospital systems. Also, our study was located in NYC, which is a unique and dense urban environment, and the characteristics of ED use in NYC may not be generalizable to hospital closures in other regions.
Our study used patient-level addresses to locate patients by using geographic information systems. Thus, our study was limited, because patient home addresses may not be the same location as where a patient decided to go the ED or activate 911; ie, injury or illness may have developed away from the home. For example, Manhattan’s commuters substantially increase its population during the workday. However, prior studies of ED utilization have shown that the home address can be used to create a reasonable estimate of distance traveled to the hospital.Reference Myers, Branas and Kallan 40 In aggregate, we believe our analysis at least provides the general direction of trends, even if the exact magnitude of the distance may not be correct for any given patient in our study.
Conclusions
In our study of a public versus private disaster-related hospital closure, we found that proximity predicted the redistribution of patients to nearby open hospitals and that hospital catchments can be used to inform how patients will respond to changes in health care access during disasters. These findings have important policy implications in helping to predict where surges in patient volume will occur and to identify patient populations at risk when disaster-related hospital closures occur.
However, we also found that this redistribution of patients was also strongly influenced by hospital ownership, because Bellevue’s patients redistributed to other public hospitals at rates higher than expected by proximity alone. This differential response to hospital closures demonstrates significant differences in how public and private patients respond to changes in health care access. Thus, public health response to disasters must consider these sharp divisions in how different populations access health care in order to effectively meet the needs of all types of patients affected by disasters and other public health emergencies.
Acknowledgments
Our study was supported by two intramural pilot awards: a health services research grant from the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics and a population health research grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Scholars Program. It was also funded in part by a grant awarded to the NYU School of Medicine to support Hurricane Sandy Recovery Research from the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response at the US Department of Health and Human Services (HITEP130006). Study funders did not have any involvement in the study design, data analysis, manuscript preparation, or the decision to submit for publication. Dr. Carr spends a portion of his time in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Health & Human Services or its components. All other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.