Kamdar Biren B, Huang Minxuan, Dinglas Victor D, Colantuoni Elizabeth, von Wachter Till M, Hopkins Ramona O, Needham Dale M
1 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California.
2 Outcomes after Critical Illness and Surgery Group.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2017 Oct 15;196(8):1012-1020. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201611-2327OC.
Following acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), joblessness is common but poorly understood.
To evaluate the timing of return to work after ARDS, and associated risk factors, lost earnings, and changes in healthcare coverage Methods: Over 12-month longitudinal follow-up, ARDS survivors from 43 U.S. ARDSNet hospitals provided employment and healthcare coverage data via structured telephone interviews. Factors associated with the timing of return to work were assessed using Fine and Gray regression analysis. Lost earnings were estimated using Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
Of 922 consenting survivors, 386 (42%) were employed before ARDS (56% male; mean ± SD age, 45 ± 13 yr), with seven dying by 12-month follow-up. Of 379 previously employed 12-month survivors, 166 (44%) were jobless at 12-month follow-up. Accounting for competing risks of death and retirement, half of enrolled and previously employed survivors returned to work by 13 weeks after hospital discharge, with 68% ever returning by 12 months. Delays in return to work were associated with longer hospitalization and older age among nonwhite survivors. Over 12-month follow-up, 274 (71%) survivors accrued lost earnings, averaging $26,949 ± $22,447 (60% of pre-ARDS annual earnings). Jobless survivors experienced a 14% (95% confidence interval, 5-22%; P = 0.002) absolute decrease in private health insurance (from 44% pre-ARDS) and a 16% (95% confidence interval, 7-24%; P < 0.001) absolute increase in Medicare and Medicaid (from 33%).
At 12 months after ARDS, nearly one-half of previously employed survivors were jobless. Post-ARDS joblessness is associated with readily identifiable patient and hospital variables and accompanied by substantial lost earnings and a shift toward government-funded healthcare coverage.
急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)后,失业情况很常见,但人们对此了解甚少。
评估ARDS后恢复工作的时间、相关风险因素、收入损失以及医保覆盖范围的变化。
在为期12个月的纵向随访中,来自美国43家ARDSNet医院的ARDS幸存者通过结构化电话访谈提供就业和医保覆盖数据。使用Fine和Gray回归分析评估与恢复工作时间相关的因素。利用劳工统计局的数据估算收入损失。
在922名同意参与的幸存者中,386名(42%)在ARDS发病前有工作(男性占56%;平均年龄±标准差为45±13岁),到12个月随访时有7人死亡。在379名发病前有工作的12个月幸存者中,166名(44%)在12个月随访时失业。考虑到死亡和退休等竞争风险,一半的登记在册且发病前有工作的幸存者在出院后13周内恢复工作,68%的人在12个月内最终恢复工作。恢复工作延迟与非白人幸存者住院时间延长和年龄较大有关。在12个月的随访中,274名(71%)幸存者出现了收入损失,平均为26,949美元±22,447美元(占ARDS发病前年收入的60%)。失业幸存者的私人医疗保险绝对减少了14%(95%置信区间,5 - 22%;P = 0.002)(从ARDS发病前的44%降至),医疗保险和医疗补助绝对增加了16%(95%置信区间,7 - 24%;P < 0.001)(从33%升至)。
ARDS发病12个月后,近一半发病前有工作的幸存者失业。ARDS后的失业与易于识别的患者和医院变量有关,同时伴随着大量收入损失以及向政府资助医保覆盖的转变。