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Journal Article

Citation

Kastenberg ZJ, Hurley MP, Weiser TG, Cole TS, Staudenmayer KL, Spain DA, Ratliff JK. J. Bone Joint Surg. Am. 2015; 97(2): 141-146.

Affiliation

Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, R291 MC 5327, Stanford, CA 94305. E-mail address: jratliff@stanford.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery)

DOI

10.2106/JBJS.N.00148

PMID

25609441

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Spine trauma patients may represent a group for whom insurance fails to provide protection from catastrophic medical expenses, resulting in the transfer of financial burden onto individual families and public payers. This study compares the rate of insurance discontinuation for patients who underwent surgery for traumatic spine injury with and without spinal cord injury with the rate for matched control subjects.

METHODS: We used the MarketScan database to perform a retrospective cohort study of privately insured spine trauma patients who underwent surgery from 2006 to 2010. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to assess the time to insurance discontinuation. Cox proportional-hazards regression was used to determine hazard ratios for insurance discontinuation among spine trauma patients compared with the matched control population.

RESULTS: The median duration of existing insurance coverage was 20.2 months for those with traumatic spinal cord injury, 25.6 months for those with traumatic spine injury without spinal cord injury, and 48.0 months for the matched control cohort (log-rank p < 0.0001). After controlling for multiple covariates, the hazard ratios for discontinuation of insurance were 2.02 (95% CI [confidence interval], 1.83 to 2.23) and 2.78 (95% CI, 2.31 to 3.35) for the trauma patients without and with spinal cord injury, respectively, compared with matched controls.

CONCLUSIONS: Rates of insurance discontinuation are significantly higher for trauma patients with severe spine injury compared with the uninjured population, indicating that patients with disabling injuries are at increased risk for loss of insurance coverage.


Language: en

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