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Journal Article

Citation

Dodson BK, Braswell M, David AP, Young JS, Riccio LM, Kim Y, Calland JF. J. Public Health (Oxford) 2018; 40(4): 848-857.

Affiliation

School of Medicine, Department of Surgery- Division of Acute Care Surgery and Outcomes Research, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/pubmed/fdx156

PMID

29190373

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ongoing development and expansion of trauma centers in the United States necessitates empirical analysis of the effect of investment in such resources on population-level health outcomes.

METHODS: Multiple linear regressions were performed to predict state-level trauma-related mortality among adults and the elderly across 50 US states in 2010. The number of trauma centers per capita in each state and the percentage of each state's population living within 45-min of a trauma center served as the key independent variables and injury-related mortality served as the dependent variable. All analyses were stratified by age (adult versus elderly; elderly ≥ 65 years old) and were performed in SPSS.

RESULTS: The proportion of a population with geographic proximity to a trauma center demonstrates a consistent inverse linear relationship to injury-related mortality. The relationship reliably retains its significance in models including demographic covariates. Interestingly, access to Levels I and II trauma centers demonstrates a stronger correlation with mortality than was observed with Level III centers.

CONCLUSION: Trauma center access is associated with reduced trauma-related mortality among both adults and the elderly as measured by state reported mortality rates. Ongoing efforts to designate and verify new trauma centers, particularly in poorly-served 'trauma deserts', could lead to lower mortality for large populations.


Language: en

Keywords

emergency care; geography; mortality

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