Evaluating Real-World National and Regional Trends in Definitive Closure in U.S. Burn Care: A Survey of U.S. Burn Centers

Author:

Carter Jeffrey E1,Amani Hamed2,Carter Damien3,Foster Kevin N4,Griswold John A5,Hickerson William L6,Holmes James H7,Jones Samuel8,Khandelwal Anjay9,Kopari Nicole10,Litt Jeffrey S11,Savetamal Alisa12,Shupp Jeffrey W13,Sood Rajiv14,Ferrufino Cheryl P15,Vadagam Pratyusha15,Kowal Stacey15,Walsh Tom16,Sparks Jeremiah16

Affiliation:

1. University Medical Center Burn Center, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

2. Lehigh Valley Health Network Regional Burn Center, Allentown, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Maine Medical Center, Portland, USA

4. Arizona Burn Center at Valleywise Health Medical Center, Phoenix, USA

5. UMC Timothy J. Harnar Regional Burn Center, Lubbock, Texas, USA

6. University of Tennessee Health Science Center: Firefighters Regional Burn Center, Memphis, USA

7. Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center Burn Center, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA

8. North Carolina Jaycee Burn Center, Chapel Hill, USA

9. MetroHealth Burn Care Center, Cleveland, Ohio, USA

10. University of California San Francisco Fresno, Fresno, USA

11. University of Missouri Health Care, Columbia, USA

12. Connecticut Burn Center at Bridgeport Hospital, USA

13. MedStar Washington Hospital Center, District of Columbia, USA

14. Richard M. Fairbanks Burn Center at Eskenazi Health, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

15. IQVIA, Falls Church, Virginia, USA

16. Avita Medical, Valencia, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract To better understand trends in burn treatment patterns related to definitive closure, this study sought to benchmark real-world survey data with national data contained within the National Burn Repository version 8.0 (NBR v8.0) across key burn center practice patterns, resource utilization, and clinical outcomes. A survey, administered to a representative sample of U.S. burn surgeons, collected information across several domains: burn center characteristics, patient characteristics including number of patients and burn size and depth, aggregate number of procedures, resource use such as autograft procedure time and dressing changes, and costs. Survey findings were aggregated by key outcomes (number of procedures, costs) nationally and regionally. Aggregated burn center data were also compared to the NBR to identify trends relative to current treatment patterns. Benchmarking survey results against the NBR v8.0 demonstrated shifts in burn center patient mix, with more severe cases being seen in the inpatient setting and less severe burns moving to the outpatient setting. An overall reduction in the number of autograft procedures was observed compared to NBR v8.0, and time efficiencies improved as the intervention time per TBSA decreases as TBSA increases. Both nationally and regionally, an increase in costs was observed. The results suggest resource use estimates from NBR v8.0 may be higher than current practices, thus highlighting the importance of improved and timely NBR reporting and further research on burn center standard of care practices. This study demonstrates significant variations in burn center characteristics, practice patterns, and resource utilization, thus increasing our understanding of burn center operations and behavior.

Funder

Avita Medical

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference14 articles.

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