Center on Aging and Department of Community Medicine, School of Medicine, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2011 Mar;59(3):406-16. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.03283.x.
To examine the long-term effect of sentinel injury (unintentional injury involving serious health-related consequences) among older adults on Medicare expenditures.
Secondary data analysis of the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey, a nationally representative survey of Medicare Beneficiaries.
Noninstitutionalized community dwellers.
Older adults (N = 12,318) continuously enrolled in Medicare Fee-for-Service under Old Age Survivors Insurance Benefits surveyed between October 1998 and December 2004.
Monthly total Medicare expenditures served as the dependent variable. Injury status (preinjury, injury episode, postinjury) was identified from Medicare claims and specified as a set of dummy variables. Injury episodes began with the first index injury claim identified and ended when no further injury claims were found within 180 days. Population-averaged models using generalized estimating equation techniques were estimated to explore changes in Medicare expenditures over time after adjusting for casemix differences. A case-crossover design was used to compare monthly Medicare expenditures before and after sentinel injury events.
Fifteen percent of beneficiaries sustained at least one sentinel injury. Medicare expenditures increased sharply during sentinel injury episodes (β = 1.703, P < .001) and remained at least 28% higher than would otherwise be expected for 27 uninterrupted months following injury. Additive Medicare expenditures associated with sentinel injury over 3 years were estimated at $28,885.
Consequences of sentinel injury in older adults extend well beyond the period typically considered to be an acute injury episode. Better understanding of the long-term consequences of injury-related outcomes is needed to achieve public health goals of reducing injury and improving injury-related medical care.
研究老年人哨兵伤害(意外发生且严重影响健康相关后果的伤害)对医疗保险支出的长期影响。
对医疗保险当前受益人调查(医疗保险受益人的全国代表性调查)的二次数据分析。
非机构化社区居民。
1998 年 10 月至 2004 年 12 月期间连续参加老年幸存者保险福利下的医疗保险费制的老年人(N=12318)。
每月总医疗保险支出作为因变量。伤害状况(受伤前、伤害期、受伤后)是从医疗保险索赔中确定的,并指定为一组虚拟变量。伤害期从首次发现的索引伤害索赔开始,当在 180 天内没有发现进一步的伤害索赔时结束。使用广义估计方程技术的人群平均模型估计了调整病例组合差异后随时间推移的医疗保险支出变化。病例交叉设计用于比较哨兵伤害事件前后的每月医疗保险支出。
15%的受益人至少遭受过一次哨兵伤害。在哨兵伤害期内,医疗保险支出急剧增加(β=1.703,P<.001),并且在伤害后至少 27 个月内仍至少高出 28%。3 年内与哨兵伤害相关的额外医疗保险支出估计为 28885 美元。
老年人哨兵伤害的后果远远超出了通常被认为是急性伤害期的时间范围。需要更好地了解与伤害相关的结果的长期后果,以实现减少伤害和改善与伤害相关的医疗保健的公共卫生目标。