| Literature DB >> 27411446 |
Darnel F Murgatroyd1, Ian A Harris2, Yvonne Tran3, Ian D Cameron3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Motor vehicle related moderate-severe orthopaedic trauma has a major impact on the burden of injury. In Australia, all states and territories provide access to financial compensation following injury in a motor vehicle crash. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of seeking financial compensation (i.e., making a claim) on injury recovery following motor vehicle related moderate-severe orthopaedic trauma.Entities:
Keywords: Compensation and redress; Injury; Multiple trauma; Outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27411446 PMCID: PMC4944484 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-016-1152-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Flow chart of study participants
Baseline characteristics and health status by claim status at six months
| Variable | No. | Claim made ( | No claim made ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years), Mean (SD) | 294 | 41.3 (16.0) | 39.7 (16.7) | 0.42 |
| Injury Severity Score, No. (%) | 0.62 | |||
| Minor - moderate 1-8 | 294 | 44 (24.6) | 31 (27.0) | |
| Serious 9-15 | 105 (58.7) | 61 (53.0) | ||
| Severe - critical 16-75 | 30 (16.8) | 23 (20.0) | ||
| New Injury Severity Score, No. (%) | 294 | 0.49 | ||
| Minor- moderate 1-8 | 34 (19.0) | 25 (21.7) | ||
| Serious 9-15 | 67 (37.4) | 48 (41.7) | ||
| Severe - critical 16-75 | 78 (43.6) | 42 (36.5) | ||
| Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD)a, Mean (SD) | 294 | 969 (149) | 990 (149) | 0.23 |
| Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD)a, No. (%) | 294 | 0.09 | ||
| Most disadvantaged | 53 (29.6) | 28 (24.3) | ||
| Disadvantaged | 17 (9.5) | 6 (5.2) | ||
| Average | 37 (20.7) | 17 (14.8) | ||
| Advantaged | 37 (20.7) | 38 (33.0) | ||
| Most advantaged | 35 (19.5) | 26 (22.6) | ||
| Male, No. (%) | 294 | 120 (67.0) | 90 (78.3) | 0.04 |
| Marital status, No. (%) | 293 | 0.34 | ||
| Single | 58 (32.4) | 46 (40.4) | ||
| Married/de facto | 103 (57.5) | 56 (49.1) | ||
| Divorced/widowed/separated | 18 (10.1) | 12 (10.5) | ||
| Education skill levelb, No. (%) | 291 | 0.06 | ||
| Bachelor degree and above | 36 (20.1) | 17 (15.0) | ||
| Certificate and advanced diploma | 66 (36.9) | 53 (46.9) | ||
| Secondary education | 65 (36.3) | 42 (37.2) | ||
| Pre-primary and primary education | 11 (6.1) | 1 (0.9) | ||
| Occupation skill levelb, No. (%) | 294 | 0.24 | ||
| Home duties/retired | 15 (8.4) | 6 (5.2) | ||
| Managers/administrators/ professionals/associate professionals | 39 (21.8) | 31 (27.0) | ||
| Tradespersons/advanced clerical and service workers | 50 (27.9) | 42 (36.5) | ||
| Intermediate clerical/sale/service production/transport workers | 28 (15.6) | 14 (12.2) | ||
| Elementary clerical/sales/service/labourers/related workers | 47 (26.3) | 22 (19.1) | ||
| Work status before injury (working), No. (%) | 292 | 140 (78.2) | 91 (80.5) | 0.64 |
| Work level before injury (full duties), No. (%) | 231 | 133 (95.0) | 89 (97.8) | 0.28 |
| Work hours before injuryc (full time), No. (%) | 227 | 105 (76.8) | 80 (88.9) | 0.02 |
| Pre-injury job satisfactiond (satisfied), No. (%) | 231 | 136 (97.1) | 84 (92.3) | 0.09 |
| Recovery expectations for worke (yes), No. (%) | 229 | 125 (89.9) | 85 (94.4) | 0.23 |
| Recovery expectations for usual activitiese (days), No. (%) | 278 | 0.37 | ||
| ≤90 | 104 (60.5) | 74 (69.8) | ||
| 91-180 | 37 (21.5) | 20 (18.9) | ||
| 181-365 | 24 (14) | 10 (9.4) | ||
| ≥366 | 7 (4.1) | 2 (1.9) | ||
| Language other than English (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 72 (40.0) | 32 (27.8) | 0.03 |
| Total yearly household incomef (before tax, AUD) excluding number of people in household, No. (%) | 270 | 0.47 | ||
| ≤$39,999 | 42 (25.5) | 22 (21.0) | ||
| $40,000-$79,999 | 55 (33.3) | 32 (30.5) | ||
| ≥$80,000 | 68 (41.2) | 51 (48.6) | ||
| Total adjusted yearly household incomef (before tax, AUD) including number of people in household, No. (%) | 270 | 0.32 | ||
| ≤$39,999 | 97 (58.8) | 58 (55.2) | ||
| $40,000-$79,999 | 54 (32.7) | 32 (30.5) | ||
| ≥$80,000 | 14 (8.5) | 15 (14.3) | ||
| Body Mass Index (BMI)g (kg/m2), No. (%) | 292 | 0.07 | ||
| <18.50 (underweight) | 4 (2.3) | 3 (2.6) | ||
| 18.50-24.99 (normal) | 49 (27.7) | 47 (40.9) | ||
| ≥25.00 (overweight) | 78 (44.1) | 35 (30.4) | ||
| ≥30.00 (obese) | 46 (26.0) | 30 (26.1) | ||
| Smoking history, No. (%) | 293 | 0.23 | ||
| Current smoker | 34 (19.1) | 28 (24.3) | ||
| Ex-smoker | 47 (26.4) | 36 (31.3) | ||
| Never smoked | 97 (54.5) | 51 (44.3) | ||
| Self-reported chronic illnesses (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 71 (39.7) | 37 (32.2) | 0.19 |
| Medication use (current), No. (%) | 293 | 52 (29.2) | 32 (27.8) | 0.80 |
|
| 292 | 7 (3.9) | 5 (4.4) | 0.85 |
| Alcohol use in the past yearg, No. (%) | 294 | 0.23 | ||
| Never | 37 (20.7) | 18 (15.7) | ||
| ≤1/month | 45 (25.1) | 20 (17.4) | ||
| 2-4 times/month | 42 (23.5) | 30 (26.1) | ||
| 2-3 times/week | 32 (17.9) | 24 (20.9) | ||
| ≥4 times/week | 23 (12.8) | 23 (20.0) | ||
| Alcohol use in the past yearh (standard drinksi on a typical day when you were drinking), Median (Min.- Max.) | 293 | 2.0 (0.0-33.0) | 3.0 (0.0-35.0) | 0.05 |
| Alcohol use in the past yearh (≥6 standard drinksi/occasion), No. (%) | 294 | 0.15 | ||
| Never | 84 (46.9) | 39 (33.9) | ||
| Less than monthly | 47 (26.3) | 34 (29.6) | ||
| Monthly | 16 (8.9) | 14 (12.2) | ||
| Weekly | 27 (15.1) | 20 (17.4) | ||
| Daily or almost daily | 5 (2.8) | 8 (7.0) | ||
| Risk of long term harm due to alcohol consumptionj(standard drinksi/week), No. (%) | 293 | 0.17 | ||
| Low risk - ≤28 male or ≤14 female | 172 (96.1) | 104 (91.2) | ||
| Risky - 29–42 male or 15–28 female | 4 (2.2) | 4 (3.5) | ||
| High risk - ≥43 male or ≥29 female | 3 (1.7) | 6 (5.3) | ||
| Risk of short term harm due to alcohol consumptionj (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 95 (53.1) | 76 (66.1) | 0.03 |
| Self-reported at fault (yes), No. (%) | 293 | 33 (18.5) | 72 (62.6) | <0.001 |
| Vehicle type, No. (%) | 294 | 0.02 | ||
| Motor vehicle | 111 (62.0) | 52 (45.2) | ||
| Motorcycle | 61 (34.1) | 58 (50.4) | ||
| Bicycle | 7 (3.9) | 5 (4.3) | ||
| Pre-morbid neck pain in last 6 months (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 6 (3.4) | 9 (7.8) | 0.09 |
| Post-morbid neck pain (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 38 (21.2) | 21 (18.3) | 0.54 |
| Crash on a public road (yes), No. (%) | 294 | 170 (95.0) | 96 (83.5) | 0.001 |
| Self-assessed pre-injury health statusk, No. (%) | 294 | 0.06 | ||
| Excellent | 55 (30.7) | 35 (30.4) | ||
| Very good | 72 (40.2) | 41 (35.7) | ||
| Good | 46 (25.7) | 26 (22.6) | ||
| Fair-Poor | 6 (3.4) | 13 (11.3) |
aThe Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage (IRSD) is a summary measure of economic and social conditions within a particular area/postcode (e.g., employment, fluency in English and household size). It is taken from the Census of Population and Housing: Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA), Cat no. 2039.0.55.001: Australian Bureau of Statistics; 2001. A low score is indicative of greater socioeconomic disadvantage
bMeasures for occupation and education are from the Australian Standard Classification of Occupations (ASCO), Cat. No. 1220.0, Australian Bureau of Statistics 1997 and the Australian Standard Classification of Education (ASCED), Cat. No. 1272.0, Australian Bureau of Statistics 2001
cMeasures for full-time (usually working at least 35 h per week) and part-time (usually working 1–35 h per week) are from the Australian Health Survey: Users' Guide, 2011–13, Cat. No. 4363.0.55.001, Australian Bureau of Statistics [45]
dPre-injury job satisfaction is based on the stem question from the Measure of Job Satisfaction questionnaire by Traynor, M. and Wade, B. 1993
eRecovery expectations was based on two measures from a large Canadian study of injured workers with soft tissue injuries by Cole et al. (2002) due to the lack of validated measures
fCategories of income are from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey Wave 6 Household Questionnaire. Adjusted household income divides household income by the sum of points: 1 for the first person ≥15 years; 0.5 for each additional person ≥15 years; and 0.3 for each person <15 years. This is taken from the National Health Survey: Users’ Guide, Cat.no. 4363.0.55.001. Australian Bureau of Statistics 2004–05
gBMI classification is from the Global Database on Body Mass Index, World Health Organisation
hQuestions are from the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test: Self-Report Version (AUDIT-C) from the Drink-less program, The University of Sydney. http://sydney.edu.au/medicine/addiction/drinkless/resources.php
i1 standard drink contains 12.5 ml or 10 g of alcohol according to the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Australian Alcohol Guidelines Health Risks and Benefits, October 2001
jRisk of long and/or short term harm due to alcohol consumption was assessed with the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) levels
kSelf-assessed pre-injury health status is based on Question 1 from the Short Form 36, Version 2.0, (SF36v2)
Baseline characteristics and health status of participants in the study compared to non-participants at six, 12 and 24 month follow up
| Participation at six months | Participation at 12 months | Participation at 24 months | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | Yesa ( | No ( |
| Yesa ( | No ( |
| Yesa ( | No ( |
|
| Age (years), Mean (SD) | 41.2 (16.5) | 36.5 (17.8) | 0.006 | 41.8 (16.9) | 36.5 (16.8) | 0.001 | 42.7 (16.6) | 36.5 (17.1) | <0.001 |
| Marital status, No. (%) | 0.001 | 0.068 | 0.002 | ||||||
| Single | 107 (35.7) | 80 (53.7) | 100 (37.3) | 87 (48.1) | 77 (33.9) | 110 (49.5) | |||
| Married/defacto | 162 (54.0) | 54 (36.2) | 140 (52.2) | 76 (42.0) | 127 (55.9) | 89 (40.1) | |||
| Divorced/widowed | 31 (10.3) | 15 (10.1) | 28 (10.4) | 18 (9.9) | 23 (10.1) | 23 (10.4) | |||
| Occupation skill levelb, No. (%) | 0.029 | 0.180 | 0.023 | ||||||
| Home duties/retired | 22 (7.3) | 17 (11.3) | 22 (8.1) | 17 (9.4) | 19 (8.3) | 20 (9.0) | |||
| Managers/professionals | 71 (23.6) | 27 (17.9) | 66 (24.4) | 32 (17.7) | 60 (26.1) | 38 (17.1) | |||
| Tradespersons | 93 (30.9) | 33 (21.9) | 81 (29.9) | 45 (24.9) | 71 (30.9) | 55 (24.8) | |||
| Intermediate clerical | 43 (14.3) | 21 (13.9) | 35 (12.9) | 29 (16.0) | 27 (11.7) | 37 (16.7) | |||
| Elementary related | 72 (23.9) | 53 (35.1) | 67 (24.7) | 58 (32.0) | 53 (23.0) | 72 (32.4) | |||
| Work status before injury (working), No. (%) | 233 (77.9) | 101 (66.9) | 0.011 | 210 (78.1) | 124 (68.5) | 0.023 | 182 (79.9) | 152 (68.5) | 0.006 |
| Total yearly household incomecNo. (%) | 0.018 | 0.080 | 0.153 | ||||||
| ≤$39,999 | 68 (24.5) | 47 (35.1) | 64 (25.3) | 51 (32.3) | 52 (24.1) | 63 (32.3) | |||
| $40,000-$79,999 | 89 (32.1) | 47 (35.1) | 80 (31.6) | 56 (35.4) | 73 (33.8) | 63 (32.3) | |||
| ≥$80,000 | 120 (43.3) | 40 (29.9) | 109 (43.1) | 51 (32.3) | 91 (42.1) | 69 (35.4) | |||
| Smoking history, No. (%) | <0.001 | 0.020 | 0.008 | ||||||
| Current smoker | 64 (21.3) | 61 (40.7) | 62 (23.0) | 63 (35.0) | 49 (21.4) | 76 (34.4) | |||
| Ex-smoker | 86 (28.7) | 33 (22.0) | 76 (28.1) | 43 (23.9) | 68 (29.7) | 51 (23.1) | |||
| Never smoked | 150 (50.0) | 56 (37.3) | 132 (48.9) | 74 (41.1) | 112 (48.9) | 94 (42.5) | |||
| Medication use (current), No. (%) | 89 (29.7) | 32 (21.2) | 0.055 | 85 (31.5) | 36 (19.9) | 0.006 | 73 (31.9) | 48 (21.6) | 0.014 |
| Recovery expectations for usual activitiesd (days), No. (%) | 0.072 | 0.899 | 0.367 | ||||||
| ≤90 | 184 (64.4) | 83 (59.7) | 155 (60.5) | 112 (66.7) | 131 (60.4) | 136 (65.7) | |||
| 91-180 | 58 (20.4) | 36 (25.9) | 58 (22.7) | 36 (21.4) | 49 (22.6) | 45 (21.7) | |||
| 181-365 | 34 (11.9) | 11 (7.9) | 34 (13.3) | 11 (6.5) | 31 (14.3) | 14 (6.8) | |||
| ≥366 | 9 (3.2) | 9 (6.5) | 9 (3.5) | 9 (5.4) | 6 (2.8) | 12 (5.8) | |||
| Vehicle type, No. (%) | 0.002 | 0.006 | 0.005 | ||||||
| Motor vehicle | 169 (56.1) | 102 (67.5) | 155 (57.2) | 116 (64.1) | 129 (56.1) | 142 (64.0) | |||
| Motorcycle | 120 (39.9) | 37 (24.5) | 107 (39.5) | 50 (27.6) | 94 (40.9) | 63 (28.4) | |||
| Bicycle | 12 (4.0) | 12 (7.9) | 9 (3.3) | 15 (8.3) | 7 (3.0) | 17 (7.7) | |||
aParticipation status ‘yes’ was measured using the information recorded in variables - work status at six, 12 and 24 months and the SF36, Physical Component Score (PCS) at six, 12 and 24 months respectively
** P < 0.01, *P < 0.05, NS not significant
bThe measure for occupation is from the Australian Standard Classification of Occupations (ASCO), Cat. No. 1220.0, Australian Bureau of Statistics 1997. See Table 1, Occupational skill level for all categories
cCategories of income are from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey Wave 6 Household Questionnaire. Income is before tax (AUD) and excluding number of people in household
dRecovery expectations was based on two measures from a large Canadian study of injured workers with soft tissue injuries by Cole et al. (2002) due to the lack of validated measures
Association of claim status and injury recovery measures using linear mixed model analysesa
| Health status measure | Mean difference (SE) | 95 % CI |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| SF-36v2 PCSb | −2.97 (0.89) | −4.73, −1.22 | 0.001 |
| SF-36v2 MCSb | −3.44 (1.11) | −5.62, −1.26 | 0.002 |
| PCL-Cc | 3.42 (1.31) | 0.87, 5.99 | 0.009 |
| GRCb | −0.66 (0.25) | −1.15, −0.17 | 0.009 |
aAdjusted for age, gender, ISS, IRSD, education skill level, language other than English, BMI, risk of short term harm due to alcohol consumption, self-reported at fault, vehicle type, pre-morbid neck pain in the last 6 months, crash on a public road, self-assessed pre-injury health status, time and claim status by time
bA negative mean difference indicates that the compensable group had on average a poorer outcome where higher scores indicate better outcomes. Health status measures are: Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Physical Component Score (SF-36v2 PCS); Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Mental Component Score (SF-36v2 MCS); and Global Rating of Change (GRC) scale
cA positive mean difference indicates that the compensable group had on average a poorer outcome where higher scores indicate poorer outcomes. Health status measure is: PTSD Checklist – Civilian Version (PCL-C)
Association of time, measured from 6–12 months and 12–24 months after injury, and injury recovery measures, using linear mixed model analysesa
| Health status measure | 6-12 months | 12-24 months | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean difference (SE) | 95 % CI |
| Mean difference (SE) | 95 % CI |
| |
| SF-36v2 PCSb | −2.38 (0.88) | −4.11, 0.64 | 0.007 | −2.62 (0.96) | −4.51, −0.73 | 0.007 |
| SF-36v2 MCSb | −2.32 (1.10) | −4.48, −0.16 | 0.032 | −1.88 (1.19) | −4.22, 0.47 | 0.116 |
| PCL-Cc | 2.06 (1.30) | −0.50, 4.61 | 0.114 | 2.10 (1.41) | −0.66, 4.86 | 0.136 |
| GRCb | −0.74 (0.25) | −1.23, −0.26 | 0.003 | −0.22 (0.27) | −0.75, 0.31 | 0.415 |
aAdjusted for age, gender, ISS, IRSD, education skill level, language other than English, BMI, risk of short term harm due to alcohol consumption, self-reported at fault, vehicle type, pre-morbid neck pain in the last 6 months, crash on a public road, self-assessed pre-injury health status, time and claim status by time
bA negative mean difference indicates improvement over time where higher scores indicate better outcomes. Health status measures are: Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Physical Component Score (SF-36v2 PCS); Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Mental Component Score (SF-36v2 MCS); and Global Rating of Change (GRC) scale
cA positive mean difference indicates improvement over time where higher scores indicate poorer outcomes. Health status measure is: PTSD Checklist – Civilian Version (PCL-C)
Injury recovery measuresa by claim status at 6, 12 and 24 months after injury
| Health status measure | No compensation claim | Compensation claim | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SE) | 95 % CI | Mean (SE) | 95 % CI | |
| SF36v2-PCSb | ||||
| 6 months | 42.88 (1.77) | 39.40, 46.36 | 40.90 (1.73) | 37.51, 44.28 |
| 12 months | 46.04 (1.87) | 42.37, 49.71 | 42.50 (1.77) | 39.03, 45.97 |
| 24 months | 48.59 (1.92) | 44.82, 52.36 | 45.19 (1.81) | 41.64, 48.74 |
| SF36v2-MCSb | ||||
| 6 months | 40.70 (2.00) | 36.77, 44.63 | 34.01 (2.14) | 29.80, 38.21 |
| 12 months | 42.17 (2.12) | 38.01, 46.34 | 37.24 (2.18) | 32.95, 41.53 |
| 24 months | 43.12 (2.17) | 38.86, 47.39 | 40.06 (2.24) | 35.66, 44.45 |
| PCL-Cb | ||||
| 6 months | 39.91 (2.57) | 34.87, 44.95 | 44.01 (2.51) | 39.09, 48.92 |
| 12 months | 38.12 (2.71) | 32.80, 43.43 | 41.68 (2.56) | 36.66, 46.70 |
| 24 months | 36.50 (2.79) | 31.03, 41.97 | 39.10 (2.62) | 33.96, 44.25 |
| GRCb | ||||
| 6 months | −1.27 (0.50) | −2.25, −0.30 | −2.00 (0.48) | −2.95, −1.05 |
| 12 months | −0.52 (0.53) | −1.55, 0.51 | −1.26 (0.49) | −2.23, −0.29 |
| 24 months | −0.42 (0.54) | −1.48, 0.64 | −0.93 (0.51) | −1.92, 0.07 |
aMarginal means based on linear fixed effect model with time and claim status as fixed effects. Adjusted for age, gender, ISS, IRSD, education skill level, language other than English, BMI, risk of short term harm due to alcohol consumption, self-reported at fault, vehicle type, pre-morbid neck pain in the last 6 months, crash on a public road, self-assessed pre-injury health status, time and claim status by time
bHealth status measures are: Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Physical Component Score (SF-36v2 PCS); Short Form-36 Version 2.0 Mental Component Score (SF-36v2 MCS); PTSD Checklist – Civilian Version (PCL-C); and Global Rating of Change (GRC) scale