Volume 53, Issue 6 pp. 846-850

Economic burden of injuries in children: Cohort study based on administrative data in a northwestern Italian region

Michele Petrinco

Michele Petrinco

Departments of Public Health and Microbiology

Statistics and Applied Maths “Diego de Castro”, University of Turin, Turin

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Daniela Di Cuonzo

Daniela Di Cuonzo

Unit of Cancer Epidemiology and Center for Cancer Prevention – Piemonte, Piemonte

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Paola Berchialla

Paola Berchialla

Departments of Public Health and Microbiology

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Marco Gilardetti

Marco Gilardetti

Unit of Cancer Epidemiology and Center for Cancer Prevention – Piemonte, Piemonte

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Francesca Foltran

Francesca Foltran

Laboratories of Epidemiological Methods and Biostatistics, Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, University of Padova, Padova, Italy

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Cecilia Scarinzi

Cecilia Scarinzi

Statistics and Applied Maths “Diego de Castro”, University of Turin, Turin

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Giuseppe Costa

Giuseppe Costa

Departments of Public Health and Microbiology

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Dario Gregori

Corresponding Author

Dario Gregori

Laboratories of Epidemiological Methods and Biostatistics, Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, University of Padova, Padova, Italy

Dario Gregori, PhD, Department of Public Health and Microbiology, Via Santena 5bis, 10126 Torino, Italy. Email: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 05 September 2011
Citations: 4

Abstract

Background: The aims of the present study were to identify which types of injuries are responsible for the major component of the health burden and to estimate the relative costs in a cohort of Italian children.

Methods: All children (0–14 years) residing in the Piedmont region, who were hospitalized for an injury (ICD-9-CM codes 800–995, excluding late effects from injury and allergies) between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2003, were considered. The cohort was linked by a unique identifier to: all the hospitalizations, all the day-hospital care, and all the prescribed medicines. Outcome was defined as the difference in health service use in the 12 months following the injury, and was compared to the year preceding the injury occurrence. Total number of hospital admissions for each individual, cumulative length of stay, day-hospital care, and prescribed medicines were calculated for the two periods. The cost of additional inpatient days and of additional outpatient care was calculated.

Results: The three most common injury categories were: intracranial injury (27.6%), fracture of upper limb (18.7%); and fracture of lower limb (9.07%); they were responsible for the major part of the additional inpatient days (55%) and outpatient care (70%). The additional expense for the National Health System during the year following an injury is approximately 1700€ for children aged 0–14.

Conclusions: This is the first Italian study to attempt to quantify the injury economic burden in a cohort of children: the costs imposed on society by injuries, suggest how important it is to commit resources to injury prevention.

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