Piatt Joseph H, Neff Daniel A
Division of Neurosurgery, A I duPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, Delaware 19803, USA.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2012 Oct;10(4):257-67. doi: 10.3171/2012.7.PEDS11532. Epub 2012 Aug 17.
The goal in this paper was to study hospital care for childhood traumatic brain injury (TBI) in a nationwide population base.
Data were acquired from the Kids' Inpatient Database (KID) for the years 1997, 2000, 2003, 2006, and 2009. Admission for TBI was defined by any ICD-9-CM diagnostic code for TBI. Admission for severe TBI was defined by a principal diagnostic code for TBI and a procedural code for mechanical ventilation; admissions ending in discharge home alive in less than 4 days were excluded.
Estimated raw and population-based rates of admission for all TBI, for severe TBI, for death from severe TBI, and for major and minor neurosurgical procedures fell steadily during the study period. Median hospital charges for severe TBI rose steadily, even after adjustment for inflation, but estimated nationwide hospital charges were stable. Among 14,932 actual admissions for severe TBI captured in the KID, case mortality was stable through the study period, at 23.9%. In a multivariate analysis, commercial insurance (OR 0.86, CI 0.77-0.95; p = 0.004) and white race (OR 0.78, CI 0.70-0.87; p < 0.0005) were associated with lower mortality rates, but there was no association between these factors and commitment of resources, as measured by hospital charges or rates of major procedures. Increasing median income of home ZIP code was associated with higher hospital charges and higher rates of major and minor procedures. Only 46.8% of admissions for severe TBI were coded for a neurosurgical procedure of any kind. Fewer admissions were coded for minor neurosurgical procedures than anticipated, and the state-by-state variance in rates of minor procedures was twice as great as for major procedures. Possible explanations for the "missing ICP monitors" are discussed.
Childhood brain trauma is a shrinking sector of neurosurgical hospital practice. Racial and economic disparities in mortality rates were confirmed in this study, but they were not explained by available metrics of resource commitment. Vigilance is required to continue to supply neurosurgical expertise to the multidisciplinary care process.
本文旨在研究全国范围内儿童创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的医院护理情况。
数据来源于1997年、2000年、2003年、2006年和2009年的儿童住院数据库(KID)。TBI的入院定义为任何ICD - 9 - CM TBI诊断代码。重度TBI的入院定义为TBI的主要诊断代码和机械通气的程序代码;排除在4天内出院回家且存活的入院病例。
在研究期间,所有TBI、重度TBI、重度TBI死亡以及大、小神经外科手术的估计原始入院率和基于人群的入院率稳步下降。重度TBI的医院费用中位数稳步上升,即使在调整通货膨胀后也是如此,但全国范围内的估计医院费用稳定。在KID记录的14932例重度TBI实际入院病例中,病例死亡率在研究期间保持稳定,为23.9%。在多变量分析中,商业保险(OR 0.86,CI 0.77 - 0.95;p = 0.004)和白人种族(OR 0.78,CI 0.70 - 0.87;p < 0.0005)与较低的死亡率相关,但这些因素与资源投入之间没有关联,资源投入以医院费用或大手术率衡量。家庭邮政编码中位数收入的增加与更高的医院费用以及更高的大、小手术率相关。重度TBI入院病例中只有46.8%被编码为任何类型的神经外科手术。编码为小神经外科手术的入院病例比预期的少,小手术率的州际差异是大手术率的两倍。讨论了“缺失颅内压监测器”的可能解释。
儿童脑外伤在神经外科医院业务中所占比例正在缩小。本研究证实了死亡率方面的种族和经济差异,但可用的资源投入指标无法解释这些差异。需要保持警惕,以便继续为多学科护理过程提供神经外科专业知识。