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The Effect of Distance to Treatment Center on Long-Term Outcomes of Burn Patients

Kevin E Galicia, Anupama Mehta, Robert Riviello, Stephanie Nitzschke, Alyssa M. Bamer, Nicole S. Gibran, Barclay T. Stewart, Steven E. Wolf, Colleen M. Ryan, John Kubasiak, Jeffrey C Schneider

2022Journal of Burn Care & Research11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Geospatial proximity to American Burn Association (ABA)-verified burn centers or self-designated burn care facilities varies across the country. This study evaluates the effect of distance to treatment center on long-term, patient-reported outcomes. Data from the Burn Model System (BMS) National Longitudinal Database were analyzed. Demographic and clinical data were compared between three cohorts stratified by distance to BMS center (<20, 20-49.9, ≥50 miles). Distance to BMS center was calculated as driving distance between discharge and BMS center ZIP code centroids. The following patient-reported outcomes, collected at 12-months follow-up, were examined: Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey (VR-12), Satisfaction with Life (SWL) scale, employment status, and days to return to work. Mixed model regression analyses were used to examine the associations between distance to BMS center and each outcome, controlling for demographic and clinical variables. Of 726 patients included in this study, 26.3% and 28.1% were <20 and between 20 and 49.9 miles to a BMS center, respectively; 46.6% were ≥50 miles to a BMS center. Greater distance was associated with white/non-Hispanic race/ethnicity, preinjury employment, flame injury, and larger burn size (P < .001). Regression analyses did not identify significant associations between distance to BMS center and any patient-reported outcomes. This study suggests that patients treated at BMS centers have similar long-term, patient-reported outcomes of physical and psychosocial function, as well as employment, despite centralization of burn care and rehabilitation services. Given a steady decline in the incidence of burn injury, continued concentration of key resources is logical and safe.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBurn centerPsychosocialDemographyLogistic regressionTrauma centerEmergency medicineRehabilitationGerontologyPhysical therapyPoison controlInternal medicineRetrospective cohort studyPsychiatrySociologyBurn Injury Management and OutcomesInjury Epidemiology and PreventionWound Healing and Treatments
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