[Urban health and inequalities in highly socially marginalised settings in Rome]

Epidemiol Prev. 2020 Sep-Dec;44(5-6 Suppl 1):38-44. doi: 10.19191/EP20.5-6.S1.P038.072.
[Article in Italian]

Abstract

Objectives: to describe hospitalisation, access to emergency care, and mortality of people living in marginalized urban areas which include public housing buildings in the North-West suburb of Rome, and to compare the results with those observed among people living in the neighbouring area.

Design: cross sectional study.

Setting and participants: resident population in the XIII and XIV Municipality of Rome, subdivided into five urban areas, in 2011-2018.

Main outcome measures: hospitalisation, access to emergency care, and mortality rates and rates ratios based on hospital discharges and emergency department visits derived from the Health Information Systems and from the Mortality Registry of Lazio Region (Central Italy), stratified by urban areas.

Results: the results show a higher use of hospital assistance and emergency care services as well a higher mortality among residents of urban areas characterized by marginalization and social disadvantage in the North-West suburb in Rome, compared to the surrounding area. The association is stronger for the residents of ex-Bastogi, a compound particularly marginalised and socially disadvantaged, where excesses in hospitalisation, emergency care admission, and mortality of +60%, +150%, and +140%, respectively, occurred.

Conclusions: the excesses of hospital use, emergency care visits, and mortality observed among the residents of marginalized urban areas suggest the need to reorganize the preventive and primary care services considering the socioeconomic disadvantage in such housing contexts. The use of both qualitative and quantitative approaches allows to understand the complexity of such contexts.

Keywords: differentials access to care; health disparities; marginalization; urban health; Rome suburb..

MeSH terms

  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Humans
  • Italy / epidemiology
  • Rome / epidemiology
  • Urban Health*
  • Urban Population
  • Vulnerable Populations*