Hackworth Jodi, Askegard-Giesmann Johanna, Rouse Thomas, Benneyworth Brian
Department of Trauma Services, Riley Hospital for Children at IU Health, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
Department of Surgery, Sanford Health, Fargo, ND, United States.
Injury. 2017 May;48(5):1063-1068. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2016.12.026. Epub 2016 Dec 28.
Literature has shown there are significant differences between administrative databases and clinical registry data. Our objective was to compare the identification of trauma patients using All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (APR-DRG) as compared to the Trauma Registry and estimate the effects of those discrepancies on utilization.
Admitted pediatric patients from 1/2012-12/2013 were abstracted from the trauma registry. The patients were linked to corresponding administrative data using the Pediatric Health Information System database at a single children's hospital. APR-DRGs referencing trauma were used to identify trauma patients. We compared variables related to utilization and diagnosis to determine the level of agreement between the two datasets.
There were 1942 trauma registry patients and 980 administrative records identified with trauma-specific APR-DRG during the study period. Forty-two percent (816/1942) of registry records had an associated trauma-specific APR-DRG; 69% of registry patients requiring ICU care had trauma APR-DRGs; 73% of registry patients with head injuries had trauma APR-DRGs. Only 21% of registry patients requiring surgical management had associated trauma APR-DRGs, and 12.5% of simple fractures had associated trauma APR-DRGs.
APR-DRGs appeared to only capture a fraction of the entire trauma population and it tends to be the more severely ill patients. As a result, the administrative data was not able to accurately answer hospital or operating room utilization as well as specific information on diagnosis categories regarding trauma patients. APR-DRG administrative data should not be used as the only data source for evaluating the needs of a trauma program.
文献表明,行政数据库与临床登记数据之间存在显著差异。我们的目的是比较使用全患者精细化诊断相关分组(APR-DRG)与创伤登记来识别创伤患者的情况,并评估这些差异对医疗资源利用的影响。
从创伤登记中提取2012年1月至2013年12月收治的儿科患者。使用一家儿童医院的儿科健康信息系统数据库将患者与相应的行政数据进行关联。使用引用创伤的APR-DRG来识别创伤患者。我们比较了与医疗资源利用和诊断相关的变量,以确定两个数据集之间的一致程度。
在研究期间,有1942名创伤登记患者和980条行政记录被识别为具有特定创伤的APR-DRG。42%(816/1942)的登记记录有相关的特定创伤APR-DRG;69%需要重症监护的登记患者有创伤APR-DRG;73%头部受伤的登记患者有创伤APR-DRG。只有21%需要手术治疗的登记患者有相关的创伤APR-DRG,12.5%的单纯骨折患者有相关的创伤APR-DRG。
APR-DRG似乎只涵盖了整个创伤人群的一部分,而且往往是病情较重的患者。因此,行政数据无法准确回答医院或手术室的利用情况以及创伤患者诊断类别的具体信息。APR-DRG行政数据不应作为评估创伤项目需求的唯一数据源。