Abstract

Long-term outcomes related to emergency department revisit, hospital readmission, and all-cause mortality, have not been well characterized across the spectrum of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI). We evaluated emergency department visit outcomes up to 1 year after pediatric TBI, in comparison to a referent group of trauma patients without TBI. We performed a longitudinal, retrospective study of all pediatric trauma patients who presented to emergency departments and hospitals in California from 2005 to 2014. We compared emergency department visits, dispositions, revisits, readmissions, and mortality in pediatric trauma patients with a TBI diagnosis to those without TBI (Other Trauma patients). We identified 208,222 pediatric patients with an index diagnosis of TBI and 1,314,064 patients with an index diagnosis of Other Trauma. Population growth adjusted TBI visits increased by 5.6% while those for Other Trauma decreased by 40.7%. The majority of patients were discharged from the emergency department on their first visit (93.2% for traumatic brain injury vs. 96.5% for Other Trauma). A greater proportion of TBI patients revisited the emergency department (33.4% vs. 3.0%) or were readmitted to the hospital (0.9% vs. 0.04%) at least once within a year of discharge. The health burden within a year after a pediatric TBI visit is considerable and is greater than that of non-TBI trauma. These data suggest that outpatient strategies to monitor for short-term and longer-term sequelae after pediatric TBI are needed to improve patient outcomes, lessen the burden on families, and more appropriately allocate resources in the healthcare system.

Highlights

  • Children ages 0 to 14 years account for over half a million emergency department (ED) visits for traumatic brain injury (TBI) annually in the United States (US).[1]

  • Compared with Other Trauma patients, mechanisms of injury for TBI patients were more commonly falls (48.3% vs. 33.5%, p

  • Visits with a TBI diagnosis in absolute numbers increased by 2.7% while those for Other Trauma decreased by 42.4% from 2005 to 2014 (S1 Table)

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Summary

Introduction

Current evidence on longer-term outcomes suggests that children with TBI may have longer-term healthcare needs, [4,5,6] and children may be more vulnerable to longer-term negative outcomes in a manner different from adults sustaining similar injuries.[7,8,9] Other studies have found significant unmet needs for children after TBI,[10,11,12,13] many of which are for cognitive and behavioral services. Identifying the unmet healthcare needs of pediatric patients with TBI, from mild to severe, may improve longer-term health outcomes and lessen the burden on family members and caretakers.[17]

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