High-risk behavior and the public burden for funding the costs of acute injury
R. C. Mackersie, J. W. Davis, D. B. Hoyt, T. Holbrook and S. R. Shackford
Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To determine if high-risk behavior is associated with increased
injury severity and cost and if public agencies bear a disproportionate
burden of that cost. DESIGN: Case comparison study utilizing patient data
collected over a 10-year period. SETTING: Five level 1 and 2 trauma centers
in an urban-suburban community with a population of 2.4 million.
PARTICIPANTS: Trauma registry data from 37,304 consecutive hospitalized
adult patients with trauma. Financial data were reported and analyzed on
28,842 of these. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incidence of alcohol intoxication,
other drug use, use of vehicular protective devices, and firearm violence
injuries in patients with private vs public health care sponsorship. Length
of hospital stay, injury severity, and hospital unit charges were assessed
for high-risk behavior. RESULTS: High-risk behavior was more prevalent
among trauma patients relying on public funding to cover the costs of their
injuries (P < .001). Total hospital unit charges were 28% and 35% higher
for motorists not wearing seat belts and motorcyclists not wearing helmets,
respectively. Injury severity and length of stay were also higher (P <
.001). CONCLUSIONS: High-risk behavior is associated with increased injury
severity and cost. Trauma victims exhibiting high-risk behavior more often
depend on public agencies to cover the cost of acute injury. Failure to
establish and enforce laws and policies designed to reduce or prevent
injury may generate enormous trauma care costs, borne to a large extent by
public agencies. Further restriction of certain types of high-risk behavior
and the institution of "users' fees," taxes, or penalties may be necessary
to reduce the disproportionate public agency cost generated by this
activity.