Abstract

This study aimed to measure the subsequent health and health service cost burden of a cohort of workers hospitalised after sustaining work-related traumatic spinal injuries (TSI) across New South Wales, Australia. A record-linkage study (June 2013–June 2016) of hospitalised cases of work-related spinal injury (ICD10-AM code U73.0 or workers compensation) was conducted. Of the 824 individuals injured during this time, 740 had sufficient follow-up data to analyse readmissions ≤90 days post-acute hospital discharge. Individuals with TSI were predominantly male (86.2%), mean age 46.6 years. Around 8% (n = 61) experienced 119 unplanned readmission episodes within 28 days from discharge, over half with the primary diagnosis being for care involving rehabilitation. Other readmissions involved device complications/infections (7.5%), genitourinary or respiratory infections (10%) or mental health needs (4.3%). The mean ± SD readmission cost was $6946 ± $14,532 per patient. Unplanned readmissions shortly post-discharge for TSI indicate unresolved issues within acute-care, or poor support services organisation in discharge planning. This study offers evidence of unmet needs after acute TSI and can assist trauma care-coordinators’ comprehensive assessments of these patients prior to discharge. Improved quantification of the ongoing personal and health service after work-related injury is a vital part of the information needed to improve recovery after major work-related trauma.

Highlights

  • The immediate period following hospital discharge after acute traumatic injury holds substantial risk for ongoing health, recovery and welfare concerns [1]

  • The Centre for Health Record Linkage (CHeReL) linked NSW Admitted Patient Data Collection (APDC), Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriage and Activity Based Funding (ABF) costing records for all people aged ≥16 years who were hospitalised between 1 June 2013 and 30 June 2016 with a traumatic spinal injuries (TSI) recorded in their index admission due to a work-related incident defined as ICD10-AM [15] code U73.0 or funding by workers compensation in the index admissions

  • In a cohort of 740 patients who had sustained work-related incident related traumatic spinal injuries during a three-year period, we found that around 8% (n = 61) of these patients experienced 119 inpatient readmissions within 28 days post-acute care discharge

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Summary

Objectives

This study aimed to measure the subsequent health and health service cost burden of a cohort of workers hospitalised after sustaining work-related traumatic spinal injuries (TSI) across

Methods
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Discussion
Conclusion
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