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Comparative Study
Hospital resources used to treat the injured elderly at North Carolina trauma centers.
- D L Covington, J G Maxwell, and T V Clancy.
- Area Health Education Center, Wilmington, NC 28402.
- J Am Geriatr Soc. 1993 Aug 1;41(8):847-52.
ObjectiveThe purpose of this paper is to compare the hospital resources used by elderly, adult, and pediatric patients treated in hospitals reporting to the North Carolina Trauma Registry (NCTR).DesignWe analyzed data on all patients entered into the NCTR from 1 January 1988 to 31 December 1990.SettingThe NCTR is a statewide registry of all trauma patients admitted for at least 24 hours or dead on arrival at the eight Level I and II trauma center hospitals in North Carolina.PatientsThe total number of patients included in the study was 21,214; elderly adults included those age 65 and older (n = 2808), adults included those 15 to 64 years old (n = 15,776), and pediatric patients included those 0 to 14 years old (n = 2630).Main Outcome MeasuresWe examined hospital resources using three measures: overall length of hospital stay in days, intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay in days for those admitted to the ICU, and total hospital charges billed during the hospitalization.ResultsControlling for injury severity, we found that elderly adults had longer mean hospital and ICU lengths of stay and higher mean hospital charges than adults or children. Whereas only 22% of injuries to elderly adults were transportation-related, transportation injuries generated 38% of their hospital charges. Sixty-eight percent of their injuries were caused by falls, generating total hospital charges of $17.6 million, an average of 15 days in hospital stay and 9 days in ICU stay.ConclusionA 10% reduction in both transportation injuries and falls among the elderly could save $3.5 million in this population over 3 years.
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