United States taxi and for-hire vehicle drivers: Emergency room utilization with high hospital admission rates Journal Article


Authors: Gany, F.; Mirpuri, S.; Kim, S. Y.; Liu, J.; Narang, B.; Ramirez, J.; Roberts-Eversley, N.; Leng, J.
Article Title: United States taxi and for-hire vehicle drivers: Emergency room utilization with high hospital admission rates
Abstract: Background: Taxi and for-hire vehicle (FHV) drivers have risk of high emergency room (ER) utilization, but there is an evidence gap around their utilization patterns and outcomes. Objective: We sought to describe and find predictors of drivers’ ER use and hospital admissions. Methods: Bilingual research staff recruited New York City (NYC) metropolitan area licensed full-time taxi/FHV drivers for a cross-sectional survey (December 2016-January 2017) at work-related locations (airport holding lots, taxi garages, etc.). Drivers were stratified by birth region, age group, and driving arrangement (taxi or FHV type). Results: We recruited 422 taxi/FHV drivers (97% male, mean age 45 years [12 SDs]). The most frequent region of birth was South Asia (36%). Average time in the U.S. was 19.9 years (11 SDs); 28% indicated speaking English “very well”. Twenty three percent had past-year ER use, with 44% subsequently admitted to hospital. In multivariate regression analyses, we found that financially being able to cover one's expenses with some left over and not having a past-year general health check-up increased the odds of visiting the ER. There were no significant predictors of hospital admissions. Conclusions: Our study is the first to show high hospital admissions following ER visits among NYC taxi/FHV drivers, which were 4 times more frequent than in the general U.S. population. Non-emergency/preventable ER use could likely be lessened by increasing awareness of and motivation to access routine health visits for general health care and chronic condition management. More research is needed into high hospital admission rates. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: adult; middle aged; hypertension; chronic disease; hospital; questionnaire; emergency service, hospital; hospitalization; new york city; cross-sectional study; cross-sectional studies; new york; employment; healthcare disparities; automobile driving; humans; human; male; female; emergency service; surveys and questionnaires; car driving; hospital emergency service
Journal Title: Work
Volume: 81
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1051-9815
Publisher: IOS Press  
Date Published: 2025-08-01
Start Page: 3361
End Page: 3368
Language: English
DOI: 10.1177/10519815251332855
PUBMED: 40302498
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PDF -- MSK corresponding author is Francesca Gany -- Jaqueline Weng's last name is listed as 'Liu' on the original publication -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Jennifer Chung Foung Leng
    80 Leng
  2. Francesca Mara Gany
    221 Gany
  3. Julia M Ramirez
    41 Ramirez
  4. Nicole S Roberts
    20 Roberts
  5. Sheena Jeswani Mirpuri
    14 Mirpuri
  6. Bharat Narang
    33 Narang
  7. Jacqueline Weng
    3 Weng
  8. Soo Young Kim
    20 Kim