(Press-News.org) STANFORD, Calif. - Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have for the first time determined how often emergency medical helicopters need to help save the lives of seriously injured people to be considered cost-effective compared with ground ambulances.
The researchers found that if an additional 1.6 percent of seriously injured patients survive after being transported by helicopter from the scene of injury to a level-1 or level-2 trauma center, then such transport should be considered cost-effective. In other words, if 90 percent of seriously injured trauma victims survive with the help of ground transport, 91.6 need to survive with the help of helicopter transport for it to be considered cost-effective.
The study, published online this month in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, does not address whether most helicopter transport actually meets the additional 1.6 percent survivorship threshold.
"What we aimed to do is reduce the uncertainty about the factors that drive the cost-effective use of this important critical care resource," said the study's lead author, M. Kit Delgado, MD, MS, an instructor in the Division of Emergency Medicine. "The goal is to continue to save the lives of those who need air transport, but spare flight personnel the additional risks of flying - and patients with minor injuries the additional cost - when helicopter transport is not likely to be cost-effective." (Helicopter medical services generally bill patients' insurance providers directly, but patients may have to pay some of the bill out of pocket, or, if they're uninsured, possibly all of it.)
The study comes at a time when finding ways to cut medical costs has become a national priority, and the overuse of helicopter transport has come under scrutiny. Previous studies have shown that, on average, over half of patients transported by helicopter have only minor, non-life threatening injuries. For these patients, transport by helicopter instead of ground ambulance is not likely to make a difference in outcomes, and the additional risk and cost of helicopter transport outweighs the benefit, Delgado said.
In 2010, there were an estimated 44,700 U.S. helicopter transports from injury scenes to level-1 and level-2 trauma centers, with an average cost of about $6,500 per transport. The total annual cost is around $290 million. (Level-1 and -2 trauma centers are hospitals equipped and staffed to provide the highest levels of surgical care to trauma patients; level-1 centers offer a broader array of readily available specialty care, and also are committed to research and teaching efforts.)
Yet emergency helicopter transport sits in a cost-efficiency conundrum: It is most needed in remote, rural areas where transport by ground can take far longer than by air. These areas also tend to have sparser populations and therefore fewer calls for aid, making it difficult to recoup the overhead costs of maintaining helicopter services, Delgado said.
In some areas of the country, however, helicopters are automatically launched based on the 911 call. "Once ground responders and the helicopter arrive, sometimes they may find patients who are awake, talking and have stable vital signs," Delgado said. "The challenge is getting helicopters to patients who need them in a rapid fashion so the flight team can intervene and make a difference, but also know based on certain criteria who isn't sick enough to require air transport."
Most health economists consider medical interventions that yield a year of healthy life - a measure known as a quality-adjusted life-year - at a cost of between $50,000 and $100,000 to be cost-effective in high-income countries, such as the United States, Delgado said. If society is willing to pay as much as $100,000 toward helicopter transport for each QALY gained by the seriously injured patients, then helicopter transport needs to reduce the mortality rate of these patients by a modest 1.6 percent compared with ground transport to meet this threshold, the study says. Or it needs to improve long-term disability outcomes, the study says.
"If future studies find helicopter transport leads to improved long-term quality of life and disability outcomes, then helicopter transport would be considered cost-effective, even if no additional lives were saved," Delgado said. "Only a handful of studies have examined outcomes other than death, without definitive results."
For severely injured patients, helicopter evacuation to a trauma center is preferable if it is faster than ground transport. However, helicopter transport is more expensive and poses rare, but often fatal, safety risks - specifically, the risk of crashing. Plus, it is often difficult for emergency responders to discern which patients would actually benefit from being flown in a helicopter rather than driven in an ambulance to a high-level trauma center. Until this study, the survival benefit needed to offset these potential drawbacks hasn't been clear.
"More accurately determining which patients have serious injuries and need to be flown is the most promising way to ensure you are getting a good value by using helicopter transport," Delgado said. "To do this, we should promote diligent use of the Centers for Disease Control's field triage guidelines among EMS responders. This would help ensure that injured victims who are transported by helicopter to a trauma center actually require trauma care. Secondly, we need to figure out whether the practice of autolaunching helicopters based on a 911 call makes sense. If the benefit of the faster response time outweighs the expenditure of resources on those patients who may not actually need helicopter transport, then autolaunching makes sense. If not, the practice should be reconsidered."
There is mixed evidence in the literature about the degree to which helicopter transport reduces mortality. It is therefore uncertain whether the routine use of helicopter transport is cost-effective for most patients in the United States when ground transport is also feasible. The study found that the cost-effectiveness also depends on regional variation in the costs of air and ground transport and the percentage of patients who are flown that have minor injuries.
"Of course, this study only applies to situations in which both ground and helicopter transport to a trauma center are feasible," Delgado added. "In situations where the only alternative is being taken by ground to a local nontrauma-center hospital or being flown to a trauma center, then clearly we want any patient with a suspicion of a serious injury flown to that trauma center."
###
The senior author of the study is Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert, PhD, assistant professor of health care research and policy. Other Stanford co-authors are Kristan Staudenmayer, MD, MS, assistant professor of surgery; N. Ewen Wang, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine; David Spain, MD, professor of surgery; and Douglas Owens, MD, MS, professor health research and policy.
The study was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the National Institutes of Health (grants K23HD051595-02 and K01AG037593-01A1) and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Information about Stanford's Division of Emergency Medicine, which also supported the work, is available at http://med.stanford.edu/emed.
The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks among the nation's top medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about the school, please visit http://mednews.stanford.edu. The medical school is part of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. For information about all three, please visit http://stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html.
Print media contact:
Sara Wykes
650-721-6263
(swykes@stanfordmed.org)
Broadcast media contact:
M.A. Malone
650-723-6912
(mamalone@stanford.edu)
Stanford study examines cost-effectiveness of helicopter transport of trauma victims
2013-04-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Roundworm quells obesity and related metabolic disorders
2013-04-26
Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, have shown in a mouse model that infection with nematodes (also known as roundworms) can not only combat obesity but ameliorate related metabolic disorders. Their research is published ahead of print online in the journal Infection and Immunity.
Gastrointestinal nematodes infect approximately 2 billion people worldwide, and some researchers believe up until the 20th century almost everyone had worms. In developed countries there is a decreasing incidence of nematode infection but a rising prevalence ...
Tracking gunfire with a smartphone
2013-04-26
You are walking down the street with a friend. A shot is fired. The two of you duck behind the nearest cover and you pull out your smartphone. A map of the neighborhood pops up on its screen with a large red arrow pointing in the direction the shot came from.
A team of computer engineers from Vanderbilt University's Institute of Software Integrated Systems has made such a scenario possible by developing an inexpensive hardware module and related software that can transform an Android smartphone into a simple shooter location system. They described the new system's capabilities ...
ESC recommends patients and centres for renal denervation
2013-04-26
Sophia Antipolis, 24 April 2013: Up to 10 per cent of patients with high blood pressure are resistant to treatment, which puts them at increased risk of cardiovascular events, including heart attacks. Clinical trials show that catheter-based renal denervation reduces blood pressure in patients who do not respond to conventional drug therapy.
Use of the technique is increasing in Europe and worldwide and several national societies have published guidance on which patients with hypertension should receive treatment. The European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European ...
New health insurance survey: 84 million people were uninsured for a time or underinsured in 2012
2013-04-26
New York, NY, April 26, 2013—Eighty-four million people―nearly half of all working-age U.S. adults―went without health insurance for a time last year or had out-of-pocket costs that were so high relative to their income they were considered underinsured, according to the Commonwealth Fund 2012 Biennial Health Insurance Survey. The survey also found that the proportion of young adults ages 19–25 who were uninsured during the year fell from 48 percent to 41 percent between 2010 and 2012, reversing a nearly decade-long trend of rising uninsured rates in that age ...
Novel screening tests for liver cancer
2013-04-26
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Friday 26 April 2013: New data from two clinical trials presented today at the International Liver Congress™ 2013 demonstrate substantial improvements in the detection of both hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and cholangiocarcinoma (CC) using diagnostic urine tests.
HCC is common throughout the world and most often develops as a late complication of chronic viral hepatitis or cirrhosis of any cause. The overall survival rate of HCC is poor and so screening for HCC offers the best hope for early detection, eligibility for treatment, and improved ...
Impact of SCOTUS rulings on narcotic dog cases on drug charges in Utah
2013-04-26
Impact of SCOTUS rulings on narcotic dog cases on drug charges in Utah
Article provided by Frees Law, P.L.L.C.
Visit us at http://www.freeslaw.com
The Supreme Court of the United States, or SCOTUS, recently made two significant rulings on cases involving the use of narcotics drugs. Although each addressed unique issues, both cases explored the meaning of the protections guaranteed under the Fourth Amendment; namely, the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
Searches and vehicles
The first case addressed whether a drugsniffing dog can be ...
Utah Trooper of the Year accused of falsifying DUI arrests
2013-04-26
Utah Trooper of the Year accused of falsifying DUI arrests
Article provided by Frees Law, P.L.L.C.
Visit us at http://www.freeslaw.com
A Utah Highway Patrol officer was recently accused of falsifying DUI arrests throughout her 10-year career. The suit claims that the officer arrested drivers who either had not been drinking or had not consumed enough to impair their driving.
Although drivers passed field sobriety tests, the officer made arrests alleging that regardless of their performance they were still impaired. She claimed the drivers were in violation of ...
How New Jersey child support law impacts Powerball winner
2013-04-26
How New Jersey child support law impacts Powerball winner
Article provided by Levine & Levine
Visit us at http://www.levine4law.com
A recent Powerball jackpot winner is gaining the attention of the media, and not just for his lottery luck. Instead, Pedro Quezada finds himself in the spotlight because he owes thousands in child support.
When a lottery winner is named, lottery officials in New Jersey review the background of anyone who wins more than $600 in the state. The winner's history is reviewed for outstanding taxes and other debts. If certain outstanding ...
Full disclosure critical when completing the Statement of Financial Affairs
2013-04-26
Full disclosure critical when completing the Statement of Financial Affairs
Article provided by Law Office of Geri Lyons Chase
Visit us at http://www.glchaselaw.com
Whether a debtor is a business filing Chapter 11 or an individual filing Chapter 7, one form that is part of every bankruptcy petition is the Statement of Financial Affairs. The Statement of Financial Affairs is an important part of a bankruptcy petition, making its accuracy and completeness critical for the smooth, orderly and successful operation of the bankruptcy process.
Statement of Financial ...
Tips to improve your odds of surviving a medical malpractice claim
2013-04-26
Tips to improve your odds of surviving a medical malpractice claim
Article provided by Bonezzi Switzer Murphy Polito & Hupp Co., L.P.A.
Visit us at http://www.bsmph.com
Practice medicine long enough, and it's bound to happen; over the course of a medical career, in all likelihood you will face multiple malpractice lawsuits. A recent analysis of data from 40,916 physicians published in the medical journal Health Affairs found that the average physician spends a lifetime total of 50.7 months with an unresolved, open malpractice claim.
In a 40 year career, that ...