Abstract
To examine the effect of state youth traumatic brain injury (TBI) legislation on pediatric emergency department (ED) utilization for sports and recreation-related mild TBIs (mTBIs). ED visits by children ages 5 to 18 years between 2006 and 2014 in the Pediatric Health Information System database (N = 452 900). Retrospective analysis. Rates of ED visits, and injury comparison groups (mTBI, moderate to severe TBI, minor head injury, and long bone fracture). Of the 452 900 ED visits, 123 192 (27.2%) were for mTBI, along with visits for moderate to severe TBIs (n = 5190), minor head injuries (n = 54 566), and long bone fractures (n = 269 952). ED visits for mTBIs were more common among males (67.5%), children ages 10-14 years (42.1%), and the privately insured (50.6%). The proportion of mTBI ED visits increased significantly, particularly from 5 years prelegislation to immediately postlegislation (57.8 to 94.8 mTBI visits per 10 000 ED visits). A similar trend was observed for minor head injuries; however, no significant changes were observed for moderate to severe TBIs and long bone fractures. Pediatric ED utilization trends for the injury comparison groups differed from each other, and from pre- and post-TBI legislation. Further research assessing effects of TBI legislation on healthcare utilization is warranted.
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