Anderson Spencer R, Sensing Thomas A, Thede Katrina A, Johnson R Michael, Fox Justin P
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, United States.
Department of General Surgery, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, United States.
Burns. 2021 Sep;47(6):1265-1273. doi: 10.1016/j.burns.2021.05.016. Epub 2021 Jun 16.
While the acute management of burn injury has received substantial attention, patients may undergo additional hospital based, acute care following initial management. We conducted this study to quantify and describe patients' full hospital based, acute care needs within 30 days following an acute burn injury.
Using Florida, Nebraska, and New York state inpatient and emergency department databases, we identified adult patients discharged for an acute burn injury from January 1, 2010-November 30, 2014. The primary outcome was the frequency of hospital based, acute care (ED visit or hospital admission) within 30 days of initial discharge. Multivariable logistic regression modeling was used to identify patient factors associated with more frequent hospital based, acute care in the overall population.
The final sample included 126,685 patients who sustained an acute burn injury and were initially managed through the ED (88.3%) or by hospital admission (11.7%). Overall, 16.5% of patients experienced at least one hospital based, acute care encounter within 30 days of discharge of their initial encounter. Most commonly, these were ED visits not undergoing hospital admission for wound care, ongoing burn care, or infectious complications. Patient-level factors associated with more frequent encounters included a history of opioid misuse or abuse (Adjusted Odds Ratio = 2.23, [95% Confidence Interval 2.01-2.47]), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AOR = 1.25, [1.12-1.38]), diabetes mellitus (AOR = 1.13, [1.04-1.23]), and mental health diagnoses (AOR = 1.22, [1.11-1.34]).
Hospital based, acute care encounters are common after initial burn management. Further efforts are needed to improve the transition to outpatient care.
虽然烧伤损伤的急性处理已受到广泛关注,但患者在初始处理后可能还需要在医院接受额外的急性护理。我们开展这项研究以量化并描述急性烧伤损伤患者在伤后30天内基于医院的全部急性护理需求。
利用佛罗里达州、内布拉斯加州和纽约州的住院患者及急诊科数据库,我们确定了2010年1月1日至2014年11月30日因急性烧伤损伤出院的成年患者。主要结局是首次出院后30天内基于医院的急性护理(急诊就诊或住院)频率。采用多变量逻辑回归模型来确定总体人群中与更频繁的基于医院的急性护理相关的患者因素。
最终样本包括126,685例急性烧伤损伤患者,他们最初通过急诊科(88.3%)或住院(11.7%)进行处理。总体而言,16.5%的患者在首次就诊出院后30天内经历了至少一次基于医院的急性护理。最常见的是因伤口护理、持续烧伤护理或感染并发症而进行的未住院的急诊就诊。与更频繁就诊相关的患者层面因素包括阿片类药物滥用或误用史(调整优势比=2.23,[95%置信区间2.01 - 2.47])、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(AOR = 1.25,[1.12 - 1.38])、糖尿病(AOR = 1.13,[1.04 - 1.23])以及心理健康诊断(AOR = 1.22,[1.11 - 1.34])。
在烧伤初始处理后,基于医院的急性护理很常见。需要进一步努力改善向门诊护理的过渡。