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Journal Article

Citation

Ketchum JM, Cuthbert JP, Deutsch A, Chen Y, Charlifue S, Chen D, Dijkers MP, Graham JE, Heinemann AW, Lammertse DP, Whiteneck GG. Spinal Cord 2018; 56(2): 126-132.

Affiliation

Research Department, Craig Hospital, Englewood, CO, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, International Spinal Cord Society, Publisher Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/s41393-017-0010-x

PMID

29105658

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: Secondary analysis of prospectively collected observational data.

OBJECTIVES: To assess the representativeness of the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems National Database (SCIMS-NDB) of all adults aged 18 years or older receiving inpatient rehabilitation in the United States (US) for new onset traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI). SETTING: Inpatient rehabilitation centers in the US.

METHODS: We compared demographic, functional status, and injury characteristics (nine categorical variables comprising of 46 categories and two continuous variables) between the SCIMS-NDB (Nā€‰=ā€‰5969) and UDS-PRO/eRehabData (Nā€‰=ā€‰99,142) cases discharged from inpatient rehabilitation in 2000-2010.

RESULTS: There are negligible differences (<5%) between SCIMS-NDB patients and the population for 31 of the 48 comparisons. Minor differences (5-10%) exist for age categories, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, FIM Motor score, and time from injury to rehabilitation admission. Important differences (>10%) exist in mean age and preinjury occupational status; the SCIMS-NDB sample was younger and included a higher percentage of individuals who were employed (62.7 vs. 41.7%) and fewer who were retired (10.2 vs. 36.1%).

CONCLUSIONS: Adults in the SCIMS-NDB are largely representative of the population of adults receiving inpatient rehabilitation for new onset TSCI in the US. However, users of the SCIMS-NDB may need to adjust statistically for differences in age and preinjury occupational status to improve generalizability of findings.


Language: en

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