From the Department of Surgery (D.W.A., T.J.J.), The Medical Center, Navicent Health, Macon; Still Burn Center (R.F.M.), Augusta; Emory University at Grady Memorial Hospital (C.J.D., E.V.A), Atlanta; Wellstar Kennestone Hospital (L.E.G.), Kennestone; Augusta University Health (R.S.M.), Augusta; Gwinnett Medical Center (G.S.), Lawrenceville; Georgia Trauma Commission (D.A.); and Doctors Hospital (C.H.F.), Augusta, Georgia.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2019 May;86(5):765-773. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000002213.
Readiness costs are real expenses incurred by trauma centers to maintain essential infrastructure to provide emergent services on a 24/7 basis. Although the components for readiness are well described in the American College of Surgeons' Resources for Optimal Care of the Injured Patient, the cost associated with each component is not well defined. We hypothesized that meeting the requirements of the 2014 Resources for Optimal Care of the Injured Patient would result in significant costs for trauma centers.
The state trauma commission in conjunction with trauma medical directors, program managers, and financial officers of each trauma center standardized definitions for each component of trauma center readiness cost and developed a survey tool for reporting. Readiness costs were grouped into four categories: administrative/program support staff, clinical medical staff, in-house operating room, and education/outreach. To verify consistent cost reporting, a financial auditor analyzed all data. Trauma center outliers were further evaluated to validate variances. All level I/level II trauma centers (n = 16) completed the survey on 2016 data.
Average annual readiness cost is US $10,078,506 for a level I trauma center and US $4,925,103 for level IIs. Clinical medical staff was the costliest component representing 55% of costs for level Is and 64% for level IIs. Although education/outreach is mandated, levels I and II trauma centers only spend approximately US $100,000 annually on this category (1%-2%), demonstrating a lack of resources.
This study defines the cost associated with each component of readiness as defined in the Resources for Optimal Care of the Injured Patient manual. Average readiness cost for a level I trauma center is US $10,078,506 and US $4,925,103 for a level II. The significant cost of trauma center readiness highlights the need for additional trauma center funding to meet the requirements set forth by the American College of Surgeons.
Economic and value-based evaluations, level III.
准备成本是创伤中心为维持基本基础设施以提供 24/7 紧急服务而产生的实际费用。尽管美国外科医师学院《为受伤患者提供最佳护理资源》中很好地描述了准备工作的组成部分,但与每个组成部分相关的成本并未得到很好的定义。我们假设,满足 2014 年《为受伤患者提供最佳护理资源》的要求将给创伤中心带来巨大的成本。
州创伤委员会与创伤医疗主任、项目管理人员和每个创伤中心的财务主管一起,为创伤中心准备成本的每个组成部分标准化定义,并开发了一份报告工具。准备成本分为四类:行政/项目支持人员、临床医务人员、内部手术室和教育/外联。为了验证一致的成本报告,财务审计员分析了所有数据。进一步评估创伤中心异常值以验证差异。所有一级/二级创伤中心(n = 16)均于 2016 年完成了调查。
一级创伤中心的平均年度准备成本为 10078506 美元,二级创伤中心为 4925103 美元。临床医务人员是最昂贵的组成部分,占一级创伤中心成本的 55%,占二级创伤中心的 64%。尽管教育/外联是强制性的,但一级和二级创伤中心每年仅在该类别上花费约 100000 美元(占 1%-2%),表明资源不足。
本研究定义了《为受伤患者提供最佳护理资源》手册中定义的准备工作每个组成部分相关的成本。一级创伤中心的平均准备成本为 10078506 美元,二级创伤中心为 4925103 美元。创伤中心准备成本的显著增加凸显了需要额外的创伤中心资金来满足美国外科医师学院设定的要求。
经济和基于价值的评估,三级。