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Presenter: Kirsten McKenzie Research Team: Sue Walker, Leanne Aitken, Andrea Besenyei,

Survival outcomes and causes of death of trauma patients: Examining the concordance of external causes of morbidity and mortality data. Presenter: Kirsten McKenzie Research Team: Sue Walker, Leanne Aitken, Andrea Besenyei, Bridget Allison, Deirdre McDonagh

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Presenter: Kirsten McKenzie Research Team: Sue Walker, Leanne Aitken, Andrea Besenyei,

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  1. Survival outcomes and causes of death of trauma patients: Examining the concordance of external causes of morbidity and mortality data Presenter: Kirsten McKenzie Research Team: Sue Walker, Leanne Aitken, Andrea Besenyei, Bridget Allison, Deirdre McDonagh Affiliations: National Centre for Classification in Health, QUT Queensland Trauma Registry, UQ

  2. Background • Mortality as trauma outcome – Key indicator of trauma system effectiveness • Deaths post-discharge – Related to trauma? • Morbidity and mortality ICD coded data for trauma outcome research • External cause as UCOD vs MCOD

  3. Background (Continued) • Quality coded data affected by: • Quality of source documentation • Accuracy of coding • Lack detail documentation  overuse of ‘dump’ codes (eg. Unspecified accident) • Coding accuracy relies on adherence to ICD coding rules and guidelines

  4. Research Questions • What were the survival outcomes of trauma patients? • Was trauma recorded on the death certificate of patients who died post-discharge? • If trauma was recorded, was there concordance in the coded data between the morbidity and mortality collections for trauma patients who died post-discharge?

  5. Methodology • Participants = 1672 trauma patients • Procedure: • Data matched to NDI using probabilistic matching • Matched cases formed sample for this research

  6. Methodology (Continued) • Cases categorised as: • Dying from medical condition with no trauma recorded • Dying from medical condition with trauma as MCOD • Dying from trauma (trauma as UCOD) • Comparison of coded data: • Codes grouped and compared based on WHO lists • Expert coder ranked code match: • More defined external cause in NDI than hospital • Less defined external cause in NDI than hospital • No match between NDI and hospital external cause

  7. Results • 8.4% one year mortality rate (Total N=1672): • 3.6% Died in hospital (n=60) • 1.0% Died <31 days post-discharge (n=17) • 0.5% Died 31-60 days post-discharge (n=8) • 3.3% Died 61 days-1 yr post-discharge (n=55)

  8. Survival Rates • Survival rates by cause: • 84.3% Falls (n=604) • 94.8% MVA (n=346) • 98.8% Machinery (n=166) • 97.2% Homicide (n=109) • 88.5% Self-Harm (n=87) • Survival rate by age: • 96.8% Age<65yrs (n=1206) • 78.1% Age>65yrs (n=466)

  9. Survival outcomes from most common causes of injuries

  10. Post-discharge deaths: Survival outcomes by age groups

  11. Medical vs Traumatic UCOD • Over 10% trauma patients who died in hospital had no trauma coded in NDI • Deaths up to 60 days post-discharge • All but 2 cases aged over 65 years • Almost 70% of trauma patients who died within 60 days post discharge with injuries due to fall had no trauma coded in NDI

  12. Causes of injuries by UCOD for hospital death and post-discharge <60 days

  13. Concordance of external cause in morbidity and mortality data • Deaths <60 days post-discharge: • Causes of injuries did not match for ¾ cases • Only one falls case had fall recorded in NDI • All unmatched falls cases due to ‘dump’ code use in NDI

  14. Discussion • 2/3 post-discharge deaths <60 days had no trauma coded in NDI • When trauma was coded, ¾ post-discharge deaths <60 days had different causes in NDI than hospital records • Where differences found, NDI usually had poorly defined causes of injury compared to hospital records

  15. Recommendations • Using hospital data or mortality data alone would not sufficiently capture and describe all cases who die following hospitalisation for trauma • Better quality information for trauma outcome research if significant recent trauma is reflected on death certificate (even if only as MCOD) • Mortality rates alone are crude indicators - multiple data issues need to be considered when examining mortality outcomes

  16. Further Information Dr Kirsten McKenzie Research Fellow National Centre for Classification in Health k.mckenzie@qut.edu.au Ph. 07 3864 9753

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