Literature DB >> 31846504

The capacity of baseline patient, injury, treatment and outcome data to predict reduced capacity to work and accident insurer costs - a Swiss prospective 4-year longitudinal trauma centre evaluation.

Thomas Gross1, Sabrina Morell1, Stefan M Scholz2, Felix Amsler3.   

Abstract

AIMS OF THE STUDY: Given the lack of information on the relation between baseline patient, injury and treatment data and longer-term outcomes for survivors of significant trauma, the objective of this evaluation was to examine the degree to which these characteristics might predict working constraints and expenses.
METHODS: 1183 significantly injured patients (New Injury Severity Score >8) of working age were treated at a Swiss trauma centre. Only patients insured by the largest national accident insurer, Suva, were included. Their sociodemographic, trauma, treatment and early clinical status data were evaluated against insurance variables for 4 years post-injury (uni- and multivariate analysis, R2).
RESULTS: 346 out of 363 surviving Suva-insured patients were eligible for analysis, constituting a 95% complete 4-year longitudinal follow-up. Overall, 121 (35%) presented with a reduced capacity to work (RCW) 1 to 4 years after the trauma. Patients experienced a mean percentage RCW (PRCW) of 27% 1 year after injury and of 14% at 4 years. In multivariate analysis all investigated parameters together explained 40% of the adjusted variance of patients’ mean PRCW over the 4-year surveillance period, with the highest association found for the block of injury-related variables (17%). Sixty percent of variance was explained for total insurance costs, found to be on average CHF 417,000 per case in patients with a RCW compared with CHF 47,000 per case without RCW (p <0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Four years after significant injury, every fifth patient presented with resultant RCW; half of these remained totally incapable of work. Investigated baseline parameters predicted about 40% of the variance regarding RCW. Future studies are needed to better explain and potentially minimise longer-term incapacity to work following injury. (Trial registration no. NCT02165137).

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31846504     DOI: 10.4414/smw.2019.20144

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Swiss Med Wkly        ISSN: 0036-7672            Impact factor:   2.193


  2 in total

1.  Short-term outcome following significant trauma: increasing age per se has only a relatively low impact.

Authors:  Fabrizio A Fiumedinisi; Felix Amsler; Thomas Gross
Journal:  Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg       Date:  2020-04-16       Impact factor: 3.693

2.  [Emergency room and major trauma treatment is a "loss-making business" : A Swiss trauma center experience with current DRG reimbursement].

Authors:  Thomas Gross; Felix Amsler
Journal:  Unfallchirurg       Date:  2020-12-18       Impact factor: 1.000

  2 in total

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