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Journal Article

Citation

Ciesla DJ, Pracht EE, Leitz PT, Spain DA, Tepas JJ, Staudenmayer KL. J. Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2017; 82(6): 1014-1022.

Affiliation

1Department of Surgery, University of South Florida College of Medicine 2Department of Health Policy and Management, University of South Florida College of Public Health 3Stanford University, Department of Surgery, Section of Acute Care Surgery, Stanford, CA 4Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Jacksonville.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/TA.0000000000001442

PMID

28328670

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Florida serves as a model for the study of trauma system performance. Between 2010 and 2104, 5 new trauma centers were opened along side 20 existing centers. The purpose of this study was to explore the impact of trauma system expansion on system triage performance and trauma center patient profiles.

METHODS: A statewide dataset was queried for all injury related discharges from adult acute care hospitals using ICD-9 codes for 2010 and 2014. The dataset, inclusion criteria, and definitions of high-risk injury were chosen to match those used by the Florida department of health in its trauma registry. Hospitals were classified as existing Level I (E1) or Level II (E2) trauma centers and New Level II (N2) centers.

RESULTS: Five N2 centers were established 11.6-85.3 miles from existing centers. Field and overall trauma system triage of high-risk patients was less accurate with increased over-triage and no change in under-triage. Annual volume at N2 centers increased but did not change at E1 and E2 centers. In 2014, Patients at E1 and E2 centers were slightly older and less severely injured while those at N2 centers were substantially younger and more severely injured than in 2010. The injured patient payer mix changed with a decrease in self-pay and commercial patients and an increase in government sponsored patients at E1 and E2 centers and an increase in self-pay and commercial patients with a decrease in government sponsored patients at N2 centers.

CONCLUSION: Designation of new trauma centers in a mature system was associated with a change in established trauma center demographics and economics without an improvement in trauma system triage performance. These findings suggest that the health of an entire trauma system network must be considered in the design and implementation of a regional trauma system. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: IV Epidemiological.


Language: en

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