Mitchell R, Williamson A
NSW Injury Risk Management Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Inj Prev. 2008 Apr;14(2):101-5. doi: 10.1136/ip.2007.017442.
Identifying work-related injuries from hospitalization data is not straightforward. How a work-related injury, either acute or non-acute, is defined will affect injury enumeration, injury burden estimates, and subsequent priority setting for prevention activity.
To examine the effect of different case identification criteria on the number and rate of hospitalized work-related injuries and to identify the type of pathologies that are recorded for work-related admissions that have an external cause code.
Identified work-related hospitalization admissions from 1 July 2000 to 30 June 2005 were analysed according to different injury case-selection criteria (ie, a principal diagnosis in the ICD-10-AM range S00-T98 and/or an external cause code in the ICD-10-AM range V01-Y98) and different admission restrictions (ie, exclusion of: transfers and type changes; re-admissions within 28 days; or day-only admissions). The principal diagnosis recorded for work-related admissions that had an external cause code were examined.
The incidence of identified work-related hospitalized injuries varied widely, from 289 to 611 per 100,000 workers depending on the identification criteria adopted. The exclusion of day-only stays reduced the identified work-related injury admissions by about one-third for each definitional condition. Where only an external cause code was used to identify an injury, the principal diagnoses codes were predominantly injuries, poisoning, and certain other consequences of external causes (74.6%) and diseases of the musculoskeletal system and connective tissue (15.5%).
Case-selection criteria adopted to identify work-related hospitalized injuries should be carefully considered. It is recommended that inclusion of certain musculoskeletal conditions that are likely to arise from repetitive minor trauma over time (ie non-acute injuries) should be considered in calculating the estimate of the burden of all work-related hospitalized injuries.
从住院数据中识别与工作相关的损伤并非易事。与工作相关的损伤(无论是急性还是非急性)的定义方式会影响损伤计数、损伤负担估计以及后续预防活动的优先级设定。
研究不同病例识别标准对住院的与工作相关损伤的数量和发生率的影响,并确定记录有外部原因编码的与工作相关入院病例的病理类型。
根据不同的损伤病例选择标准(即国际疾病分类第十版澳大利亚修订本(ICD-10-AM)范围S00-T98中的主要诊断和/或ICD-10-AM范围V01-Y98中的外部原因编码)和不同的入院限制(即排除:转院和类型变更;28天内的再次入院;或仅日间入院),对2000年7月1日至2005年6月30日期间确定的与工作相关的住院入院病例进行分析。检查记录有外部原因编码的与工作相关入院病例的主要诊断。
根据所采用的识别标准,确定的住院与工作相关损伤的发生率差异很大,每10万名工人中从289例到611例不等。排除仅日间住院病例后,每种定义条件下确定的与工作相关损伤入院病例减少了约三分之一。仅使用外部原因编码来识别损伤时,主要诊断编码主要为损伤、中毒和外部原因的某些其他后果(74.6%)以及肌肉骨骼系统和结缔组织疾病(15.5%)。
应仔细考虑用于识别住院与工作相关损伤的病例选择标准。建议在计算所有住院与工作相关损伤的负担估计时,应考虑纳入某些可能因长期重复性轻微创伤而产生的肌肉骨骼疾病(即非急性损伤)。