Are There Any Differences in Road Traffic Injury Outcomes between Older and Younger Adults? Setting the Grounds for Posttraumatic Senior Personal Injury Assessment Guidelines

Author:

Cunha-Diniz Flávia1ORCID,Taveira-Gomes Tiago2345ORCID,Santos Agostinho16,Teixeira José Manuel7,Magalhães Teresa2347

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal

2. Center for Health Technology and Services Research (CINTESIS@RISE), Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal

3. Toxicology Research Unit, University Institute of Health Sciences, Advanced Polytechnic and University Cooperative (CESPU), CRL, 4585-116 Gandra, Portugal

4. MTG Research and Development Lab, 4200-604 Porto, Portugal

5. Faculty of Health Sciences, University Fernando Pessoa (FCS-UFP), 4249-004 Porto, Portugal

6. National Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences, 3000-213 Coimbra, Portugal

7. Porto Health Care Unity—Accidents, Fidelidade—Insurance Company, 4100-207 Porto, Portugal

Abstract

Injury outcomes seem to be more severe in older than younger persons. This may make personal injury assessment (PIA) particularly difficult, mainly because of seniors’ previous health frailties. To set the grounds for seniors’ PIA guidelines, we compared an older with a younger adult population of trauma victims and, secondarily, identified differences between the groups regarding three-dimensional and medico-legal damage parameters assessment. Using a retrospective study of victims of road traffic accidents, we compared the groups (n = 239 each), assuring similar acute injury severity (ISS standardised difference = 0.01): G1 (older adults); G2 (younger adults). Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds ratio. G1 revealed higher negative consequences when considering the three-dimensional damage assessment, with more frequent and severe outcomes, being a cause of further difficulties in daily living activities, with a loss of independence and autonomy. Nevertheless, regarding the medico-legal damage parameters, permanent functional disability did not show significant differences. This study generates evidence that reveals the need to rethink the traditional methodology of PIA in older persons, giving more relevance to the real-life contexts of each person. It is essential to: obtain complete information about previous physiologic and health states, begin the medico-legal assessment as early as possible, make regular follow-ups, and perform a multidisciplinary evaluation.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference63 articles.

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4. World Health Organization (2015). World Report on Ageing and Health.

5. Gopinath, B., Harris, I.A., Nicholas, M., Casey, P., Blyth, F., Maher, C.G., and Cameron, I.D. (2015). A comparison of health outcomes in older versus younger adults following a road traffic crash injury: A cohort study. PLoS ONE, 10.

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