4.5 Article

The Cost Of Overtriage: More Than One-Third Of Low-Risk Injured Patients Were Taken To Major Trauma Centers

Journal

HEALTH AFFAIRS
Volume 32, Issue 9, Pages 1591-1599

Publisher

PROJECT HOPE
DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2012.1142

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Physician Faculty Scholars Program
  2. National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  3. NIH Roadmap for Medical Research, through the Oregon Clinical and Translational Research Institute [UL1 RR024140]
  4. University of California, Davis, Clinical and Translational Science Center [UL1 RR024146]
  5. Stanford Center for Clinical and Translational Education and Research [1UL1 RR025744]
  6. University of Utah Center for Clinical and Translational Science [UL1-RR025764, C06-RR11234]
  7. University of California, San Francisco, Clinical and Translational Science Institute [UL1 RR024131, KL2 RR024130]

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Regionalized trauma care has been widely implemented in the United States, with field triage by emergency medical services (EMS) playing an important role in identifying seriously injured patients for transport to major trauma centers. In this study we estimated hospital-level differences in the adjusted cost of acute care for injured patients transported by 94 EMS agencies to 122 hospitals in 7 regions, overall and by injury severity. Among 301,214 patients, the average adjusted per episode cost of care was $5,590 higher in a level 1 trauma center than in a nontrauma hospital. We found hospital-level differences in cost among patients with minor, moderate, and serious injuries. Of the 248,342 low-risk patients-those who did not meet field triage guidelines for transport to trauma centers-85,155 (34.3 percent) were still transported to major trauma centers, accounting for up to 40 percent of acute injury costs. Adhering to field triage guidelines that minimize the overtriage of low-risk injured patients to major trauma centers could save up to $136.7 million annually in the seven regions we studied.

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