From the National Clinician Scholars Program (P.U.N., K.K.T.), Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation and Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy (P.U.N., K.K.T., B.S., N.F.S., M.R.H., J.W.S.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Department of Surgery (P.U.N., G.A.A.), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Surgery (K.K.T.), Stanford University, Stanford, California; Center for Surgery and Public Health (G.A.A.), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; and Department of Surgery (N.F.S., M.R.H., J.W.S.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2021 Jul 1;91(1):121-129. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000003135.
While much of trauma care is rightly focused on improving inpatient survival, the ultimate goal of recovery is to help patients return to their daily lives after injury. Although the overwhelming majority of trauma patients in the United States survive to hospital discharge, little is known nationally regarding the postdischarge economic burden of injuries among trauma survivors.
We used the National Health Interview Survey from 2008 to 2017 to identify working-age trauma patients, aged 18 to 64 years, who sustained injuries requiring hospitalization. We used propensity score matching to identify noninjured respondents. Our primary outcome measure was postinjury return to work among trauma patients. Our secondary outcomes included measures of food insecurity, medical debt, accessibility and affordability of health care, and disability.
A nationally weighted sample of 319,580 working-age trauma patients were identified. Of these patients, 51.7% were employed at the time of injury, and 58.9% of them had returned to work at the time of interview, at a median of 47 days postdischarge. Higher rates of returning to work were associated with shorter length of hospital stay, higher education level, and private health insurance. Injury was associated with food insecurity at an adjusted odds ratio (aOR) of 1.8 (95% confidence interval, 1.40-2.37), with difficulty affording health care at aOR of 1.6 (1.00-2.47), with medical debt at aOR of 2.6 (2.11-3.20), and with foregoing care due to cost at aOR of 2.0 (1.52-2.63). Working-age trauma patients had disability at an aOR of 17.6 (12.93-24.05).
The postdischarge burden of injury among working-age US trauma survivors is profound-patients report significant limitations in employment, financial security, disability, and functional independence. A better understanding of the long-term impact of injury is necessary to design the interventions needed to optimize postinjury recovery so that trauma survivors can lead productive and fulfilling lives after injury.
Economic & Value-Based Evaluations, level II; Prognostic, level II.
尽管创伤护理的大部分重点都放在提高住院患者的生存率上,但康复的最终目标是帮助患者在受伤后重返日常生活。尽管美国绝大多数创伤患者在出院时都存活下来,但全国范围内关于创伤幸存者出院后受伤的经济负担知之甚少。
我们使用 2008 年至 2017 年的全国健康访谈调查,确定了需要住院治疗的 18 至 64 岁工作年龄的创伤患者。我们使用倾向评分匹配来确定未受伤的受访者。我们的主要结果测量是创伤患者受伤后的工作回归情况。我们的次要结果包括衡量食物不安全、医疗债务、医疗保健的可及性和负担能力以及残疾。
确定了一个全国加权样本,其中有 319,580 名工作年龄的创伤患者。其中,51.7%的患者在受伤时就业,58.9%的患者在出院后中位数为 47 天的时间内重返工作岗位。较高的工作回归率与较短的住院时间、较高的教育水平和私人医疗保险有关。受伤与食物不安全的调整比值比(aOR)为 1.8(95%置信区间,1.40-2.37),难以负担医疗保健的 aOR 为 1.6(1.00-2.47),有医疗债务的 aOR 为 2.6(2.11-3.20),由于费用而放弃治疗的 aOR 为 2.0(1.52-2.63)。工作年龄的创伤患者残疾的 aOR 为 17.6(12.93-24.05)。
美国工作年龄创伤幸存者出院后的受伤负担是巨大的——患者报告在就业、财务安全、残疾和功能独立性方面存在重大限制。需要更好地了解伤害的长期影响,以便设计出优化伤害后康复的干预措施,使创伤幸存者能够在受伤后过上富有成效和充实的生活。
经济和基于价值的评估,II 级;预后,II 级。