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Journal Article

Citation

Wenzinger E, Rivera-Barrios A, Gonzalez G, Herrera F. Hand (NY) 2019; 14(3): 408-412.

Affiliation

1 Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publications)

DOI

10.1177/1558944717735943

PMID

29121783

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to identify the incidence of upper extremity injuries presenting to emergency departments (EDs) nationally.

METHODS: The Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS) database was queried using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes specific for hand/wrist injuries to identify national estimates of ED visits. The incidence, mean age, gender, payer mix, hospital type, location (metropolitan vs nonmetropolitan), and geographic region were recorded.

RESULTS: In total, 2 791 257 patients with upper extremity injuries and infections were treated at an ED in 2010. In total, 7.4% resulted in hospital admission; 57% of patients were male. Most common age group affected was 18 to 44 years (44%), followed by those less than 17 years (24%) and 45 to 64 years (21%). The 3 most common injury classifications were soft tissue contusions (37%), fractures (27%), and infections (17%). Thirty-seven percent of patients had private insurance, 21% had Medicaid, 19% were uninsured, 13% Medicare, and 10% other. In total, 63% of visits were seen in nonteaching EDs, 80% were seen in metropolitan cities, and 65% of visits were seen at non-trauma-designated hospitals. Geographically, 37% of visits were in the South, 25% Midwest, 20% Northeast, and 18% in the West.

CONCLUSIONS: Soft tissue contusion was the most frequent diagnosis. More than half of the patients were male, while the majority of patients were under the age of 44. Ninety-three percent of patients did not require hospital admission. Half had private insurance and the two-thirds of these patients were seen at nonteaching facilities.


Language: en

Keywords

emergency care; hand injuries; infections; trauma; upper extremity

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