Reider Lisa, Falvey Jason R, Okoye Safiyyah M, Wolff Jennifer L, Levy Joseph F
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy, and Management, 624N. Broadway, Baltimore MD 21205, United States.
Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine, United States.
Injury. 2024 Feb;55(2):111199. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2023.111199. Epub 2023 Nov 14.
Falls are a leading cause of injury and hospital readmissions in older adults. Understanding the distribution of acute treatment costs across inpatient and emergency department settings is critical for informed investment and evaluation of fall prevention efforts.
This study used the 2016-2018 National Inpatient Sample and National Emergency Department Sample. Annual treatment cost of fall injury among adults 65 years and older was estimated from charges, applying cost-to-charge and professional fee ratios. Weighted multivariable generalized linear models were used to separately estimate cost for inpatient and emergency department (ED) setting by injury type and individual demographic and health characteristics after adjusting for payer and hospital level characteristics.
Older adults incurred an estimated 922,428 inpatient and 2.3 million ED visits annually due to falls with combined annual costs of $19.8 billion. Over half of inpatient visits for fall injury were for fracture. Notably, 23% of inpatient visits were for fractures other than hip fracture and 14% of inpatient visits were for multiple fractures with costs totaling $3.4 billion and $2.5 billion, respectively. Annual ED costs were driven by superficial injury totaling $1.5 billion. Cost of ED visits were higher for adults 85 years and older (adjusted cost ratio (aCR): 1.11, 95% Confidence Interval (CI)I: 1.11-1.12) and those with dementia (aCR: 1.14, 95% CI: 1.13-1.15). Higher inpatient and ED visit cost was also associated with high-energy falls and discharge to post-acute care.
The study found that more than 3 million older adults in the United States seek hospital care for fall injuries annually, a major concern given increasing capacity strain on hospitals and EDs. The $20 billion in annual acute treatment costs attributed to fall injury indicate an urgent need to implement evidence-based fall prevention interventions and underscores the importance of newly launched ED-based fall prevention efforts and investments in geriatric emergency departments.
跌倒是老年人受伤和再次住院的主要原因。了解急性治疗费用在住院和急诊科的分布情况,对于明智地投资和评估预防跌倒措施至关重要。
本研究使用了2016 - 2018年全国住院患者样本和全国急诊科样本。根据收费情况,应用成本与收费比率及专业费用比率,估算65岁及以上成年人跌倒受伤的年度治疗费用。在调整支付方和医院层面特征后,使用加权多变量广义线性模型,按损伤类型以及个体人口统计学和健康特征,分别估算住院和急诊科的费用。
老年人每年因跌倒导致估计922,428次住院和230万次急诊科就诊,年度总费用达198亿美元。超过一半的跌倒受伤住院就诊是因骨折。值得注意的是,23%的住院就诊是因非髋部骨折,14%的住院就诊是因多处骨折,费用分别总计34亿美元和25亿美元。年度急诊科费用主要由总计15亿美元的浅表损伤所致。85岁及以上成年人(调整成本比率(aCR):1.11,95%置信区间(CI):1.11 - 1.12)以及患有痴呆症的成年人(aCR:1.14,95% CI:1.13 - 1.15)的急诊科就诊费用更高。较高的住院和急诊科就诊费用还与高能量跌倒以及转至急性后期护理有关。
该研究发现,美国每年有超过300万老年人因跌倒受伤寻求医院治疗,鉴于医院和急诊科的容量压力不断增加,这是一个重大问题。因跌倒受伤产生的每年200亿美元急性治疗费用表明,迫切需要实施基于证据的预防跌倒干预措施,并强调了新开展的基于急诊科的预防跌倒努力以及对老年急诊科投资的重要性。