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Statewide Investigation of Medically Attended Adverse Health Conditions of Persons With Spinal Cord Injury
Authors:Elisabeth Pickelsimer  Eric J Shiroma  Dulaney A Wilson
Institution:1. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolinapickelse@musc.edu;3. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts;4. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington
Abstract:Abstract

Background/Objective: To report over a 10-year period the statewide prevalence and incidence of medically attended adverse health conditions in people with new traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI).

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Methods: (a) Identified all new TSCI cases discharged alive from statewide acute care hospitals, 1996 to 2000, using ICD-9-CM methodology, (b) Followed cases from 1996 to 2005 to quantify medically attended health conditions documented during emergency department visits, acute care hospitalizations, and outpatient hospital visits, (c) Used the life table method to calculate the prevalence and incidence of health conditions, (d) Examined Cox proportional hazard ratio of mortality by gender controlling for age and TSCI severity.

Results: Nine hundred eighty-eight residents (257 women, 731 men) with TSCI were alive 90 days after discharge from acute care hospitalization from 1996 to 2000. Nine hundred twenty-three (251 female, 672 male) (93.4%) residents had an observed medically attended adverse health condition in the 10-year follow-up period. The most prevalent classes of diseases and disorders were (a) muscle and connective tissue, (b) renal and urinary, (c) digestive, (d) circulatory, (e) respiratory, (f) endocrine/nutritional/metabolic, and (g) infectious. Incidence of new injury was 29.0% for males and 26.9% for females. During the follow-up period, 49 women (19%) and 104 men (14%) died.

Conclusions: People with TSCI experience diverse adverse health conditions in the 10 years after initial injury. An interdisciplinary health care provider team approach to allocating resources and implementing countermeasures to prevent or limit occurrence of these conditions is vital to these patients’ continuum of care.

J Spinal Cord Med. June 2010; 33(3): 221–231
Keywords:Spinal cord injuries  traumatic  Demographics  Secondary complications  age  gender  Prevalence  Incidence
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