G. Verheul et al., MORTALITY AND MORBIDITY ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISTRIBUTION OF MONTHLY WELFARE PAYMENTS, Academic emergency medicine, 4(2), 1997, pp. 118-123
Objective: The impact of major social policy decisions on community he
alth is rarely considered or analyzed, This article describes the asso
ciation of major community and health resource use in relation to the
distribution of monthly welfare payments. Methods: A descriptive, retr
ospective study was performed using existing accessible databases in t
he city of Vancouver, British Columbia (BC), and St. Paul's Hospital,
a tertiary care, downtown institution. The mean numbers of admissions
or responses per week and per day related to the monthly welfare check
issue day in 1993 were collected from the following health agencies:
the BC Ambulance Service, the Vancouver Fire Department, the BC Corone
r's Office, the Vancouver Deter Center, the Vancouver City Police Jail
for public drunkenness, and St. Paul's Hospital ED. Results: Comparis
on of weekly events for non-payweeks vs the week starting on welfare p
ayday (mean+/-SD) are: St. Paul's ED, 949+/-51 vs 993+/-81 (p=0.10); D
etox Center observation admissions, 29+/-5.6 vs 40+/-7.3 (p <0.001); V
ancouver Fire Department medical responses, 453+/-44 vs 527+/-45 (p <0
.001); BC Ambulance Service responses, 3,338+/-101 vs 3,634+/-85 (p <0
.001) and coroner-reported deaths, 8.8+/-3.0 vs 13.6+/-2.6 (p <0.0001)
. Conclusions: As measured in multiple independent databases, there is
a significant increase in morbidity and mortality in the week after t
he distribution of monthly welfare paychecks.