Department of Orthopaedics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.
Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Feb 1;4(2):e2034898. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.34898.
Orthopedic injury is assumed to bear negative socioeconomic consequences. However, the magnitude and duration of a fracture's impact on patient income and social insurance benefits remain poorly quantified.
To characterize the association between orthopedic injury and patient income using state tax records.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study included adult patients surgically treated for an orthopedic fracture at a US academic trauma center from January 2003 through December 2014. Hospital data were linked to individual-level state tax records using a difference-in-differences analysis performed from November 2019 through August 2020. The control group comprised of data resampled from fracture patients at least 6 years prior to injury.
An operatively treated fracture of the appendicular skeleton.
The primary outcome was individual annual earnings up to 5 years postinjury. Secondary outcomes included annual household income and US Social Security benefits for 5 years postinjury and catastrophic wage loss within 2 years of injury.
A total of 9997 fracture patients (mean [SD] age, 44.6 [18.9] years; 6725 [67.3%] men) to 34 570 prefracture control participants (mean [SD] age, 40.0 [20.5] years; 21 666 [62.7%] men). The median (interquartile range) of preinjury wage earnings was $16 847 ($0 to $52 221). The mean annual decline in individual earnings during the 5 years following injury was $9865 (95% CI, -$10 686 to -$8862). Annual household income declined by $5259 (95% CI, -$6337 to -$4181) over the same period. A fracture was associated with a $206 (95% CI, $147 to $265) mean annual increase in Social Security benefits in the 5 years after injury. An injury increased the risk of catastrophic wage loss by 11.6% (95% CI, 10.5% to 12.7%). Substantial relative income loss was observed in patients with preinjury earnings in the top 3 quartiles, but changes in income were negligible for patients with preinjury earnings in the bottom quartile (19%; 95% CI, -4% to 48%).
In this cohort study of patients surgically treated for an orthopedic fracture at a US academic trauma center, fractures were associated with substantial individual and household income loss up to 5 years after injury, and 1 in 5 patients sustained catastrophic income loss in the 2 years after fracture. Gains in Social Security benefits offset less than 10% of annual income losses.
人们认为骨科损伤会带来负面的社会经济后果。然而,骨折对患者收入和社会保险福利的影响程度和持续时间仍未得到充分量化。
利用州税务记录来描述骨科损伤与患者收入之间的关系。
设计、地点和参与者:本队列研究纳入了 2003 年 1 月至 2014 年 12 月在美国一家学术创伤中心接受骨科骨折手术治疗的成年患者。使用差异-差异分析(2019 年 11 月至 2020 年 8 月进行)将医院数据与个人层面的州税务记录联系起来。对照组由至少在受伤前 6 年的骨折患者的数据重新采样组成。
四肢骨骼的手术治疗骨折。
主要结果是受伤后 5 年内的个人年收入。次要结果包括受伤后 5 年内的年度家庭收入和美国社会保险福利,以及受伤后 2 年内的灾难性工资损失。
共有 9997 名骨折患者(平均[标准差]年龄 44.6[18.9]岁;6725[67.3%]名男性)和 34570 名骨折前对照参与者(平均[标准差]年龄 40.0[20.5]岁;21666[62.7%]名男性)。受伤前工资收入的中位数(四分位距)为 16847 美元(0 美元至 52221 美元)。受伤后 5 年内,个人收入的年平均下降额为 9865 美元(95%CI,-10686 美元至-8862 美元)。同期,家庭年收入下降 5259 美元(95%CI,-6337 美元至-4181 美元)。骨折后 5 年内,社会保险福利平均每年增加 206 美元(95%CI,147 美元至 265 美元)。受伤会使灾难性工资损失的风险增加 11.6%(95%CI,10.5%至 12.7%)。在受伤前收入在前 3 个四分位数的患者中观察到了相当大的相对收入损失,但在受伤前收入在最低四分位数的患者中,收入变化可忽略不计(19%;95%CI,-4%至 48%)。
在这项对美国学术创伤中心接受骨科骨折手术治疗的患者进行的队列研究中,骨折与受伤后长达 5 年的个人和家庭收入损失以及 1/5 的患者在骨折后 2 年内遭受灾难性收入损失有关。社会保险福利的增加仅弥补了年收入损失的不到 10%。