
%0 Journal Article
%T The economics of fatal injury: dollars and sense
%J Journal of trauma
%D 1985
%A Rowlands, B. J.
%A Miller, P. W.
%A Flynn, T. C.
%A Fischer, Ronald P.
%V 25
%N 8
%P 746-750
%X This study reviewed the direct costs (charges for goods and services) for 77 consecutive patients who presented to this trauma service with a Trauma Score (TS) of four or less. Seventy-four patients died (96.1%). The survival rates based upon the Trauma Scores were: TS 1, 0(0/34); TS 2, 0(0/9); TS 3, 7.7% (1/13); TS 4, 9.5% (2/21). Only four nonsurvivors lived more than 24 hours. The remaining 70 patients died within 24 hours without achieving even transient cardiovascular stability. Three of the 77 patients survived (3.9%) but only one achieved a productive recovery. The total direct cost for the 77 patients was +544,477.66. Physician fees, which accounted for 26.7% of the direct costs, averaged +1,887.57 per patient (range, 0-+11,291.00). The average direct cost for the three survivors was +50,138.94. The average direct cost for nonsurvivors was +5,325.18 (+3,383.29 for patients with a TS 1 or 2, +8,018.76 for patients with a TS 3 or 4). The hospital direct costs for nonsurvivors ranged from +40.00 for a patient declared dead on arrival to +57,817.91 for a patient who died 41 days after admission. It is futile to continue resuscitational efforts if a valid Trauma Score of 1 or 2 is confirmed shortly after the initiation of appropriate resuscitative measures. Continued therapy is futile for the remainder of patients admitted with Trauma Scores of 4 or less if they do not achieve cardiovascular stability in response to appropriate resuscitative measures within 1 hour of admission.
%G 
%I Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
%@ 0022-5282
%U http://dx.doi.org/