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下肢骨科创伤患者的灾难性医疗支出。

Catastrophic Health Expenditure in Patients with Lower-Extremity Orthopaedic Trauma.

机构信息

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri.

出版信息

J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2023 Mar 1;105(5):363-368. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.22.00623. Epub 2022 Dec 21.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Health-care expenditures are a leading contributor to financial hardship in the United States. Traumatic orthopaedic injuries are unpredictable and result in substantial expense. Our objectives were to quantify the catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) risk of patients with orthopaedic trauma and to examine the impact of insurance status, socioeconomic status, sex, and race on CHE.

METHODS

We identified all isolated lower-extremity orthopaedic trauma cases at a safety-net, Level-1 trauma center from 2018 to 2020. We queried an institutional charge database to obtain total hospital charges, insurance status, and ZIP Code to determine out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditures. To evaluate financial hardship, we calculated the CHE risk as defined by the World Health Organization's threshold of OOP expenditures, ≥40% of estimated household post-subsistence income.

RESULTS

In our cohort of 2,535 patients, 33% experienced a risk of CHE. A risk of CHE was experienced by 99% of patients who were uninsured, 35% of patients with private insurance, 2% of patients with Medicare, and 0% of patients with Medicaid. Multivariable regression modeling showed that patients who were uninsured were significantly more likely to experience a risk of CHE compared with patients with private insurance (odds ratio, 107.68 [95% confidence interval, 37.20 to 311.68]; p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

One-third of patients with lower-extremity orthopaedic trauma experience a risk of CHE, with patients who are uninsured facing a disproportionately higher risk of CHE compared with patients who are insured. Our results suggest that the expansion of public insurance options may provide substantial financial protection for those at the greatest risk for CHE.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Prognostic Level III . See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

摘要

背景

医疗保健支出是导致美国经济困难的主要原因之一。外伤性骨科损伤是不可预测的,会导致大量的费用。我们的目标是量化骨科创伤患者的灾难性医疗支出(CHE)风险,并研究保险状况、社会经济地位、性别和种族对 CHE 的影响。

方法

我们从 2018 年至 2020 年在一家医疗保障网一级创伤中心确定了所有孤立的下肢骨科创伤病例。我们查询了机构收费数据库以获得总住院费用、保险状况和邮政编码,以确定自付费用(OOP)支出。为了评估经济困难,我们根据世界卫生组织的 OOP 支出≥40%的家庭生存后收入的阈值,计算了 CHE 风险。

结果

在我们的 2535 名患者队列中,33%的患者存在 CHE 风险。无保险的患者中有 99%存在 CHE 风险,私人保险的患者中有 35%存在 CHE 风险,医疗保险的患者中有 2%存在 CHE 风险,医疗补助的患者中不存在 CHE 风险。多变量回归模型显示,与私人保险患者相比,无保险的患者更有可能面临 CHE 风险(优势比,107.68 [95%置信区间,37.20 至 311.68];p < 0.001)。

结论

三分之一的下肢骨科创伤患者面临 CHE 风险,无保险的患者面临 CHE 风险的比例明显高于有保险的患者。我们的研究结果表明,扩大公共保险选择可能会为那些面临 CHE 风险最大的人提供实质性的财务保护。

证据水平

预后 III 级。请参阅作者说明以获取完整的证据水平描述。

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