TY - JOUR T1 - Associations between community well-being and hospitalisation rates: results from a cross-sectional study within six US states JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030017 VL - 9 IS - 11 SP - e030017 AU - Brita Roy AU - Carley Riley AU - Jeph Herrin AU - Erica Spatz AU - Brent Hamar AU - Kenneth P Kell AU - Elizabeth Y Rula AU - Harlan Krumholz Y1 - 2019/11/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/11/e030017.abstract N2 - Objective To evaluate the association between community well-being, a positively framed, multidimensional assessment of the health and quality of life of a geographic community, and hospitalisation rates.Design Cross-sectional studySetting Zip codes within six US states (Florida, Iowa, Nebraska, New York, Pennsylvania and Utah)Main outcome measures Our primary outcome was age-adjusted, all-cause hospitalisation rates in 2010; secondary outcomes included potentially preventable disease-specific hospitalisation rates, including cardiovascular-related, respiratory-related and cancer-related admissions. Our main independent variable was the Gallup-Sharecare Well-Being Index (WBI) and its domains (life evaluation, emotional health, work environment, physical health, healthy behaviours and basic access).Results Zip codes with the highest quintile of well-being had 223 fewer hospitalisations per 100 000 (100k) residents than zip codes with the lowest well-being. In our final model, adjusted for WBI respondent age, sex, race/ethnicity and income, and zip code number of hospital beds, primary care physician density, hospital density and admission rates for two low-variation conditions, a 1 SD increase in WBI was associated with 5 fewer admissions/100k (95% CI 4.0 to 5.8; p<0.001). Results were similar for cardiovascular-related and respiratory-related admissions, but no association remained for cancer-related hospitalisation after adjustment. Patterns were similar for each of the WBI domains and all-cause hospitalisations.Conclusion and relevance Community well-being is inversely associated with local hospitalisation rates. In addition to health and quality-of-life benefits, higher community well-being may also result in fewer unnecessary hospitalisations. ER -