| Literature DB >> 33869674 |
Christopher H Merritt1, Matthew A Taylor1, Caleb J Yelton1, Swapan K Ray1.
Abstract
Individuals having sustained traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) in the United States are living longer as compared to historical trends, thanks to an ever-evolving understanding of the nature of this injury. Despite this, multiple barriers to care for TSCI patients remain including variations in government-issued veteran insurance, privatized insurance, and among uninsured individuals. The United States alone experiences 12,000 new TSCI cases every year, many of these are found to occur in a growing proportion of elderly individuals. It is crucial to understand both the short-term direct costs as wells as the long-term rehabilitation costs required by these TSCI patients. The lifetime financial burden for those having sustained a TSCI can be immense for patients, insurance companies, and hospital systems alike. Among those with TSCI, re-hospitalization rates are high, leading to increased healthcare resource utilization within this specific patient population. Costs can quickly balloon into hundreds of thousands of dollars and cause a profound financial burden for these patients. This review article seeks to communicate an understanding of the current financial landscape surrounding TSCI patients. The authors will also examine the costs of acute emergency room surgical care such as American spinal injury association grade, hospital length of stay, as well as the timing delay between injury and surgical decompression. Long-term costs associated with TSCI such as rehabilitation, care of secondary comorbidities, and post-injury employment prospects will be examined as well. These costs will be framed from the patient's perspective as well as from both the hospital and insurance company's perspectives. It is hoped a complete understanding as to what makes TSCI such a medically and financially burdensome injury will allow for improved healthcare resource utilization in this population.Entities:
Keywords: American spinal injury association grade; Traumatic spinal cord injury; healthcare resource; hospital length of stay; post-injury employment; rehabilitation
Year: 2019 PMID: 33869674 PMCID: PMC8052100 DOI: 10.20517/2347-8659.2019.15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm ISSN: 2347-8659
Figure 1.A pie chart illustrating the major causes of TSCI since 2010[ according to the NSCISC. The NSCISC estimates that the most common causes of TSCI include motor vehicle accidents (blue), mechanical falls (orange), and acts of violence (gray). Less commonly TSCI is caused by sports-related injuries (yellow), medical/surgical causes (pink), and other miscellaneous causes not previously listed (green) TSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury; NSCISC: National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center
Percentage of patients with ASIA grade at ER discharge and resultant one year ASIA improvements
| ASIA Grade | Injury type | Definition Of ASIA Grade | TSCI patients with ASIA Grade at time of Discharge | ASIA Grade one year improvement rates (≥ 1 Grade level) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade A | Complete | Complete sensorimotor loss | 36.4% | 25.1% |
| Grade B | Incomplete | Complete motor loss with incomplete sensory loss | 13.8% | 71.1% |
| Grade C | Incomplete | Motor function is preserved, but more than 50% of key muscles below the neurological level have a muscle grade < 3 | 11.9% | 78.8% |
| Grade D | Incomplete | Motor function is preserved but the at least 50% of key muscles below the neurological level have a muscle grade ≥ 3 | 37.6% | 14.1% |
| Grade E | Normal | Motor and sensory functions are normal | 0.3% | N/A |
ASIA: American spinal injury association
within each of the ASIA grade rows, there is the percentage of total TSCI patients at the time of hospital discharge with that specific ASIA grade injury out of all TSCI patients
ER: emergency room; TSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury
percentage of patients who have improved ≥ 1 ASIA grades from their original ASIA grade assignment (column 1) at one year post-discharge. Grade B and C injuries have the highest chance of improvements at 71.1% and 78.8%, respectively[
Figure 2.A pie chart illustrating the extent of injury following TSCI since 2010[ according to the NSCISC. The NSCISC estimated that nearly half of all TSCI resulted in the extent of injury known as incomplete tetraplegia (blue). Incomplete and complete paraplegia were similar in prevalence following TSCI (represented by orange and gray, respectively) while complete tetraplegia (yellow) was the least common extent of injury following TSCI as compared to the other major extent of injury categories. TSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury; NSCISC: National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center
Figure 3.A flowchart illustrates the primary risk factors for a TSCI (blue) and the obstacles TSCI patients may face throughout their lives. Decreased neurological recovery (yellow) is the factor that has the greatest negative impact on a patient. Access to rehabilitation (star) is the only modifiable attribute shown that can reduce the cascade of negative events leading to a decreased patient quality of life. SES: socioeconomic status; TSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury