Owens Pamela L, Zodet Marc W, Berdahl Terceira, Dougherty Denise, McCormick Marie C, Simpson Lisa A
Agency for Healthcare, Research and Quality, Department of Health and Human Services, Rockville, Maryland 20850, USA.
Ambul Pediatr. 2008 Jul-Aug;8(4):219-240.e17. doi: 10.1016/j.ambp.2008.03.032. Epub 2008 May 27.
To examine state differences in children's utilization of injury-related emergency department (ED) care across 14 states, benchmarking aggregate state estimates against national expenditure estimates for outpatient injury-related ED care.
A retrospective analysis was performed using the 2003 State Emergency Department Databases and State Inpatient Databases from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project and data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Pediatric ED visits with any injury International Classification of Diseases Ninth Version Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) diagnosis code were selected. The Barell Injury Diagnosis Matrix, ICDMAP-90 software, and the Trauma Information Exchange Program data were used to classify injuries, produce injury severity scores, and examine utilization in trauma centers. Aggregate and state-specific descriptive analyses compared differences in patient and injury characteristics and admission status by age, severity of injury, and expected payer.
Over 1.5 million or nearly one-third of ED visits were for pediatric injuries in the 14 states studied. Nationally, 5.4% of children had an injury-related ED visit, and approximately $2.3 billion was spent on outpatient injury-related ED visits in 2003. The pattern of injury-related ED visit care varied considerably by state. For example, injury-related ED visit rates ranged from 63.3 to 164.4 per 1000 children. Infants, adolescents, children from very low income communities, and children from nonmetropolitan and nonmicropolitan areas were more likely to have an injury-related ED visit than their peers. Although patient characteristics were fairly consistent across states, admission rates and expected source of payment for injury-related ED visits varied considerably by state. Hospital admission rates ranged from 1.5% to 4.4% of injury-related ED visits and expected payer estimates ranged from 37.1% to 71.0% of visits billed to private insurance, 17.9% to 47.0% billed to Medicaid, and 2.1% to 10.4% billed as uninsured.
This study suggests that injuries account for a significant portion of pediatric ED visits. There is substantial variation in ED use and hospital admissions for injured children across states and payers. This variation suggests that there are several opportunities for improvement in emergency care for children. To better understand the underlying reason for the variation, multivariate and hypothesis-driven research should focus on the nature and outcomes of injury-related ED care in the context of small area practice patterns and state programs, policies, and care system characteristics.
研究14个州儿童使用与损伤相关的急诊科(ED)护理的州际差异,将各州的总体估计数与全国门诊损伤相关ED护理支出估计数进行对比。
利用医疗成本和利用项目的2003年州急诊科数据库和州住院数据库以及医疗支出小组调查的数据进行回顾性分析。选取任何具有损伤国际疾病分类第九版临床修订本(ICD - 9 - CM)诊断代码的儿科ED就诊病例。使用巴雷尔损伤诊断矩阵、ICDMAP - 90软件和创伤信息交换计划数据对损伤进行分类,生成损伤严重程度评分,并研究创伤中心的利用率。总体和各州特定的描述性分析比较了按年龄、损伤严重程度和预期付款人划分的患者和损伤特征及入院状态的差异。
在研究的14个州中,超过150万次或近三分之一的ED就诊是儿科损伤。在全国范围内,2003年5.4%的儿童有与损伤相关的ED就诊,门诊损伤相关ED就诊支出约为23亿美元。与损伤相关的ED就诊护理模式因州而异。例如,与损伤相关的ED就诊率在每1000名儿童63.3至164.4次之间。婴儿、青少年、来自极低收入社区的儿童以及来自非大城市和非微型城市地区的儿童比同龄人更有可能进行与损伤相关的ED就诊。尽管各州的患者特征相当一致,但与损伤相关的ED就诊的入院率和预期支付来源因州而异。医院入院率在与损伤相关的ED就诊的1.5%至4.4%之间,预期付款人估计数在向私人保险计费就诊的37.1%至71.0%之间,向医疗补助计费就诊的17.9%至47.0%之间,以及列为未参保计费就诊的2.1%至10.4%之间。
本研究表明,损伤占儿科ED就诊的很大一部分。各州和付款人之间,受伤儿童的ED使用和住院情况存在很大差异。这种差异表明儿童急诊护理有几个改进机会。为了更好地理解差异的根本原因,多变量和假设驱动的研究应关注小区域实践模式以及州项目、政策和护理系统特征背景下与损伤相关的ED护理的性质和结果。