Annual
price tag for nonfatal injuries in the U.S. tops $1.8 trillion
A new analysis
by researchers from Brown University and the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation has found
that nonfatal injuries in the U.S. in the year 2013 cost more than $1.8
trillion.
And nearly all injures
are preventable, said Dr. Mark Zonfrillo, an associate professor at Brown
University’s Warren Alpert Medical School and a pediatric emergency medicine
physician at Hasbro Children’s Hospital.
The study, led by
Zonfrillo, found that in 2013 about one in 10 individuals in the U.S. was
treated for an injury at a hospital, resulting in an annual cost of $1.853
trillion. The findings were published on Monday, Oct. 8, in the
journal Injury Epidemiology.
The team analyzed
anonymized data from hospital-treated nonfatal injuries and determined three
different costs for the 31,038,072 injuries: total medical spending, work lost,
and decreased quality of life.
Medical spending — which included costs such as hospital and home care, emergency transportation, medicines and physical therapy — cost $168 billion. Future lost work from permanent disability cost $223 billion, and quality of life losses cost $1.46 trillion.
Medical spending — which included costs such as hospital and home care, emergency transportation, medicines and physical therapy — cost $168 billion. Future lost work from permanent disability cost $223 billion, and quality of life losses cost $1.46 trillion.
“Having an economic analysis that focuses on the burden of injury from the perspective of not only acute medical costs, but also ongoing costs like quality of life, raises awareness around injury and the importance of injury-prevention efforts,” Zonfrillo said. “These injuries are preventable, and quantifying the costs is one strategy to encourage societal injury prevention efforts.”
Injury prevention
depends on engineering, education, economics and enforcement, he said. For
example, a well-designed child car seat is of limited use if it’s not used
consistently or properly. On the enforcement side, Zonfrillo said a common
reason people give for not using safety devices, such as bicycle helmet, or not
behaving safely, such as putting their cellphone away while driving, is “‘if it
was important enough, it would be a law.’ Laws are powerful — legislation has
absolutely been shown to reduce deaths caused by injuries.”
Previous analyses of
injury costs have focused only on certain populations, such as children or
Medicaid recipients, included medical treatment costs only or used much older
data sets, Zonfrillo said.
In addition to the
total cost of injury, the researchers looked at the data by various categories
including age, household income, region and cause of the injury. Injuries
caused by falls and being hit by objects were the most common in all age
groups.
On the other hand, near drownings, firearm-related injuries and self-harm injuries were less common, but more expensive.
On the other hand, near drownings, firearm-related injuries and self-harm injuries were less common, but more expensive.
The study found the
following, among many other key data points:
12.08 million injuries
were caused by falls or being hit by an object accidentally, which cost almost
$808 billion in total (an average of $66,857 per injury); an additional 654,688
assaults involved hitting with an object or pushing, which cost $67.66 billion
(average $103,352 each)
3.08 million injuries
were caused by car-related accidents — whether to a vehicle occupant, pedestrian
or cyclist — and these cost $207 billion (average $67,163)
10,772 near drownings
— including accidents, self-harm, assaults and those of unspecified intent —
cost $3.89 billion (average $361,354)
74,072 firearm-related
injuries cost $16.32 billion (average $220,380)
437,963 self-harm
injuries cost $30.17 billion (average $68,894); poisonings were the most common
(63.8 percent) but the least costly (average $44,316); self-harm injuries
excluding poisonings cost an average of $112,222 each
Children between the
ages of 1 and 11 received injuries costing $47,663, on average, which is the
lowest for any age group; infants under the age of 1 were the costliest age
group at $97,623 each
Households with
incomes in the bottom 25 percent experienced more injuries, accounting for 30.8
percent of all injuries; households with incomes in the top 25 percent had
slightly more expensive injuries, at $64,950 per injury, compared to an average
$59,687 across all income levels
91.5 percent of
patients with injuries were treated and released from the emergency room, while
the remaining 8.5 percent were admitted to the hospital; patients who were
admitted had far more costly injuries averaging $343,535, compared to $33,184;
of that number, $38,112 was from medical costs and $305,423 from lost work and
decreased quality of life due to disability
Of the 8.5 percent of
patients admitted to the hospital, 38.7 percent were admitted in the South,
which is proportional to the percent of the U.S. population living in the
region (37.4 percent); however injuries admitted to hospitals in the West were
11 percent more costly than average, both in terms of straight medical costs
(19.8 percent) and lost work and decreased quality of life (10.4 percent)
The National Institutes
of Health (grant 5K08HD073241) supported the research.