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Journal Article

Citation

Roubik D, Cook AD, Ward JG, Chapple KM, Teperman S, Stone ME, Gross B, Moore FO. J. Surg. Res. 2017; 217: 36-44.e2.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Chandler Regional Medical Center, Chandler, Arizona.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jss.2016.12.039

PMID

28117092

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ground-level falls (GLFs) are the predominant mechanism of injury in US trauma centers and accompany a spectrum of comorbidities, injury severity, and physiologic derangement. Trauma center levels define tiers of capability to treat injured patients. We hypothesized that risk-adjusted observed-to-expected mortality (O:E) by trauma center level would evaluate the degree to which need for care was met by provision of care.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective cohort study used National Trauma Data Bank files for 2007-2014. Trauma center level was defined as American College of Surgeons (ACS) level I/II, ACS III/IV, State I/II, and State III/IV for within-group homogeneity. Risk-adjusted expected mortality was estimated using hierarchical, multivariable regression techniques.

RESULTS: Analysis of 812,053 patients' data revealed the proportion of GLF in the National Trauma Data Bank increased 8.7% (14.1%-22.8%) over the 8 y studied. Mortality was 4.21% overall with a three-fold increase for those aged 60 y and older versus younger than 60 y (4.93% versus 1.46%, P < 0.001). O:E was lowest for ACS III/IV, (0.973, 95% CI: 0.971-0.975) and highest for State III/IV (1.043, 95% CI: 1.041-1.044).

CONCLUSIONS: Risk-adjusted outcomes can be measured and meaningfully compared among groups of trauma centers. Differential O:E for ACS III/IV and State III/IV centers suggests that factors beyond case mix alone influence outcomes for GLF patients. More work is needed to optimize trauma care for GLF patients across the spectrum of trauma center capability.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Comparative assessment; Ground-level fall; Outcomes; Risk adjustment; Trauma center level

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