Better Outcomes for Catastrophic Cases Deborah Benson, PhD, ABPP-RP © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Speaker Bio Deborah Benson, PhD, ABPP-RP Sr. Director of Clinical Services Manages Clinical Directors, Associate Clinical Directors, Nurse Case Managers and medical/clinical specialists, to develop clinical management plans that ensure positive outcomes for patients with catastrophic brain, spinal cord, burn, amputation and multiple trauma injuries Served as Director of Transitions of Long Island, a post-acute neuro-rehabilitation program within the Northwell (formerly North Shore-LIJ) Health System, for 15 years PhD in clinical neuropsychology from the City University of New York and board certification in rehabilitation psychology from the American Board of Professional Psychology Served on the board of the Brain Injury Association of New York State (BIANYS) and remains active in the association’s local chapter. Currently serves on the board of Kids’ Chance of New York. 2 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Objectives Understand what constitutes a catastrophic case Identify factors that drive up costs for these cases Address how to effectively manage these challenging cases Identify important and impactful innovations and future trends in trauma care 3 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary What Makes a Catastrophic Case? The following clinical diagnostic indicators reflect complex cases often managed by Paradigm. Acquired Brain Injury Spinal Cord Injury • Traumatic brain injury • Concussion • Skull fracture • Loss of consciousness • Intracranial injury • Seizures • Cerebrovascular injury • Physical Deficits • Anoxia • Cognitive Impairments • Encephalopathy • Challenging behaviors • Spinal fractures • Central cord syndrome • Spinal cord injury (complete • Cauda equina syndrome or incomplete) • Paraplegia • Tetraplegia Burn Injury • Flame/Heat burns • Over 10% TBSA burns, up to over 90% TBSA burns • Chemical burns • Burns to: Face, Hands, Neck, Feet, Groin, Major joints • Electrical injuries • Inhalation injuries Multiple Trauma/Amputation • Amputation • Major abdominal injury • Degloving injury • Multiple fractures • Major chest injury • Crushing injury 4 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary The Golden Triangle Research has found that despite cost containment efforts, a subset of complex cases typically persist in driving costs: the “Golden Triangle.” 0% 6.2% Case Count 6% Case Dollars 0% 50% 49.9% 67.3% 13.8% We can help you gain insight into your own Golden Triangle and then positively impact those cases 100% 100% Source: Lipton, et.al. “Medical Services by Size of Claim”, NCCI, 2009-10 5 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary A Small Set of Injuries Become Your Most Expensive Cases These Golden Triangle injuries represent half of costs and consist mainly of catastrophic injuries and complex pain conditions. 6.2% of Cases Drive 49.9% of Costs Cases All Other 93.8% Costs Catastrophic: 0.3% Pain: 5.9% Total: 6.2% Catastrophic 17% Pain 33% All Other 50% Sources: Lipton, et.al. “Medical Services by Size of Claim”, NCCI, 2009-10 Paradigm Analytics 6 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Catastrophic Injury Costs Why are these types of injuries so costly? Extent and severity of acute injury Diagnoses with significant longterm impacts and risks for complications Severe neurological injury and instability Concurrent major organ injury and medical instability Need for cardio-respiratory resuscitation, emergency surgery Orthopedic injuries and surgeries Need for acute and post acute care Severe functional disability Brain injury Spinal cord injury Major burns Amputation Major multiple trauma 7 7 Proprietary © Paradigm Outcomes, What Factors Drive the Costs in This Population? Clinical complexity/challenges, innovation, fractured care, and workers’ compensation. Escalating Costs Better Outcomes Hospital Greater survival Rehabilitation Increases in life expectancy Increases in functional outcome Medication Increase in quality of life Technology DME Service Duplication/Nonintegration Litigation 8 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Setting and Mitigation of Reserves Every catastrophic case is different. • Injury type • Severity Baseline • Complexity • Comorbidities • Psychosocial dynamics Variables • Jurisdiction • Life expectancy • Chronic effects Duration • Risks/Volatility 9 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Acquired Brain Injury © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Prevalence of Traumatic Brain Injury In the US National TBI Estimates - Center for Disease Control Each year, an estimated 2.5 million people sustain a TBI. ─ Of them: • Approximately 52,000 (2%) die • Approximately 284,000 (11%) are hospitalized • Approximately 2.2 million (87%) are treated and released from an emergency department Estimated that between 3.2 million-5.3 million persons in US are living with a TBI-related disability Nearly 4 out of 10 will demonstrate functional decline by 5 years post-injury, compared to level of recovery attained 1-2 years post injury. Costs of TBI: ─ Direct (e.g., hospitalization, rehabilitation) and indirect (e.g., lost productivity) medical costs of TBI totaled an estimated $76.5 billion in the United States in 2010. Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2015). Report to Congress on Traumatic Brain Injury in the United States: Epidemiology and Rehabilitation. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention. Atlanta, GA. 11 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary TBI and Workers’ Compensation Head and central nervous system injuries are the most expensive types of occupational injuries to treat as determined by Workers’ Compensation Claims1 Falls are the leading cause of work-related injury; a study of TBI workers’ compensation claims found that the next most prevalent causes included being struck by an object (26.3%) and motor vehicle crashes (18.3%)1 Other common causes of TBI include sports-related injuries, interpersonal violence, and alcohol and substance abuse 1 Source: DeVivo, Michael J. Head Neck Injuries in Industries and Sports in Frontiers in head and neck trauma: clinical and biomechanical. IOS press, 1998. 12 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Reserving for Acquired Brain Injury Base Costs Volatility Severity of Injury Complexity of injury: ─ Other injuries causing impairment ─ Mild, Moderate, Severe Implications: ─ Other injuries causing medical illness ─ Extremely variable ─ Brain injury impairments and complications • Cognitive deficits • Physical impairments Pre-existing co-morbidity (medical, psychosocial) • Behavioral challenges Prognosis, expectation for long-term impairment, late effects and associated costs • Paralysis Life expectancy Jurisdiction: cost of care by state , scope of practice, MD practice patterns 13 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary At Any Level of Injury, Early Intervention is Key ■ Identification and prevention of complications should begin as early as possible – Proactive vs. Reactive approach ■ Greater awareness and understanding – Rehabilitation Centers of Excellence – Best opportunity for recovery 14 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Effective Early Interventions for TBI Medication and therapy can prove effective in addressing many issues associated with TBI. Cognitive Short-term memory deficits, hazy/cloudy feelings, concentration problems Somatic/Physical Fatigue, insomnia, headaches, vision impairment Emotional/ Behavioral Agitation, depression, anxiety • Neurostimulant medications (Amantadine, Ritalin, Adderall, Provigil) • Structured environment with a daily schedule • Compensatory strategies for planning to address memory deficits • Hormone replacement in cases of pituitary gland impairment (as determined by endocrine work-up) • Medications to regulate sleep-wake cycle in cases of insomnia • Relaxation, biofeedback, activity regulation, medication to address headaches • Vestibular therapy to address dizziness/imbalance • Vision assessments and interventions (therapy, lenses) • Counseling and/or psychotropic medications for mood issues • Behavioral programming • Family education/training 15 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Characteristics of Mild, Moderate and Severe TBI Severe Moderate Mild Glasgow Coma Scale 3-8 Glasgow Coma Scale 9-12 Glasgow Coma Scale 13-15 Low arousal Not mobile Low responsiveness Mobile with some physical limitations Agitation/behavioral changes may include irritability and depression Long-term residual impact May not be radiographic evidence of hemorrhage/ hematoma Identified as ready for discharge or short rehab May be evidence of behavioral or cognitive changes May be significant emotional component 16 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Identifying High Risk Cases Data High Risk Initial Glasgow Coma Scale score <8 (severe) Initial scan results Coma Duration (GCS) > 72 hours Rancho Los Amigos scale Levels 3-6 most challenging from behavioral perspective (localized response to confused/appropriate) Risk factors Anoxic injury Status epilepticus/late seizures Alcohol/substance use/abuse Neurologic deterioration Increased ICP (intracranial pressure) Psychosocial assessment Family work/instability Age >50 Psychiatric or Substance Use history History of non-compliance Education <12 years History of developmental/intellectual disabilities Previous ABI Depressed skull fracture Hemorrhage Multiple injury sites (bilateral) Midline shift Ventricular enlargement 17 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Stages of Recovery These stages mark the common treatment levels for ABI patients; likely to take 1-2+ years, depending on severity of injury and resultant disabilities. Inpatient Acute medical, e.g. ICU, Med/Surg, Trauma Sub-acute rehab Acute rehab Home/ Communitybased Transitional Post-acute residential rehabilitation Day treatment program/ outpatient therapies Home-based supports Communityreintegration 18 Long-Term Supports Skilled nursing facility Home (indep./ semi-indep.) Supported living Social Day Programs Voc./Avocational reintegration © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Recovery from Severe TBI ~ 35% of patients thought to be in vegetative state are actually conscious Of those patients who were following commands upon discharge from acute rehab: ─ 8-21% were functioning INDEPENDENTLY upon discharge ─ 56-85% functioning INDEPENDENTLY by 5 years post injury Of those patients who were not following commands upon discharge from acute rehab: ─ 19-36% were functioning INDEPENDENTLY by 5 years post injury Source: Archives of PMR, 2013; 94:1855-60 19 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Spinal Cord Injury © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary What is a Spinal Cord Injury? Compression or other damage that causes spinal cord injury or dysfunction. Incidence total and work comp – 11,000 new spinal cord injuries per year – Approximately 1,200 new spinal cord injury cases per year caused by on-the-job injuries1 Traumatic vs. non-traumatic (medical) Not all spinal injuries cause spinal cord injury and not all spinal cord injuries involve damage to the spine Key signs of spinal cord dysfunction Causes – Motor vehicle accidents 46% – Falls 22% – Gunshot wounds/violence 12% – Herniated disc – Non-traumatic causes – Paralysis/weakness – Sensory change in an anatomical location – Bladder and/or bowel dysfunction – Gait disorder – Weak arms A host of potential medical problems 1Source: 21 Spinal Cord Injury Facts and Figures at a Glance, 2011 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Reserving for Spinal Cord Injury Base costs Volatility ■ Severity = NLI (Neurological Level of Injury) ■ Complexity of injury: – Other injuries causing impairment – Exact level: C1-S5 – Other injuries causing medical illness • Tetraplegic: high, low • Paraplegic: high, low – Spinal cord impairments and complications – Completeness of injury: A, B, C, D, E ■ Pre-existing co-morbidity ■ Prognosis, expectation of long-term impairment, late effects and associated costs ■ Implications: paralysis, neurogenic bowel and bladder, pain ■ Life expectancy ■ Jurisdiction: cost of acute medical care by state, scope of practice, provider practice patterns 22 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Severity Determines Rehab Potential and Medical Resources It depends on the neurological level of injury (NLI) and completeness. Neurological Level of Injury Complete vs. Incomplete – Tetraplegia – ASIA levels – Paraplegia – Determine how neurologically complete an injury is – Exact neurological level of injury – Must include a rectal exam – Based on a very specific physical exam – Is there a major chance for recovery? This is key information to obtain as soon as possible 23 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Outcomes by SCI level: Predictable Neuroanatomy With each intact level comes the potential for greater function. Paraplegia (T2-S1) Tetraplegic (C1-C8) – Not all persons with paraplegia are alike – C4 and below should be vent wean-able – T4 and above have respiratory issues – Ventilator dependence can cost $500,000 per year – High level (thoracic) paraplegia have truncal weakness – Vulnerable to pneumonia and pulmonary insufficiency – Low level paraplegia (incl. cauda equina syndrome)B&B dysfunction – All persons with tetraplegia will need personal care assistance – Most persons with paraplegia will need some level of support/assist Source: Outcomes Following Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical Practice Guidelines for Health-Care Professionals. Consortium for Spinal Cord Medicine, Paralyzed Veterans of America (1999). 24 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Stages of Recovery These stages mark the common treatment levels /phases for spinal cord injury patients; likely to last 1-2+ years. Inpatient Reintegration Residential/ Community Maintenance/ Living with SCI Late Effects of Disability Acute medical ICU, Med/Surg Trauma Sub-acute rehab Acute rehab Post-acute rehab Outpatient rehab Establish care protocols Home/personal care Provider management Productive engagement Rehospitalizations Declines in function Comorbidities Pain Management 25 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Burn Injuries © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Stages of Recovery These stages mark the common phases of treatment for burn patients; can take 3+ years, for those with severe/extensive burn injuries. Early Phase Medical Stability Acute surgeries/skin coverage Wound care Bedside rehab Mid Phase Aggressive Rehab (inpatient/outp- atient) Secondary surgeries (contracture, scar mgmt) Home/pers. care Pain Management 27 Late Phase Maintenance of function Maintenance of skin integrity Adjustment issues Voc/Avoc reintegration © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Amputations/Multiple Trauma © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Stages of Recovery These stages mark the common phases of treatment for Multiple Trauma/Amputation patients; can take 1-2 years, depending on complexity/extent of injuries. Early Phase Mid Phase Later Phase Medical stability Acute surgeries (I&D, repair, stabilization) Wound care Bedside rehab Weight-bearing restrictions Aggressive rehab (inpatient/outpatient) Prosthetic prep Secondary surgeries (revisions, neuromas, hardware removal) Prosthetic training, advancement Maximization of function Vocational/Avocational reintegration Pain Management 29 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Tips to Manage More Effectively How do we make catastrophic cases less volatile? Early Late Understand severity and complexity of injuries Manage late medical/surgical outcomes early and concurrently Know the acute care facility and engage the providers Address injured worker coping and adjustment Predict/project the course of recovery Assure providers address restorative vs. maintenance/supportive treatment needs Identify medical, rehabilitative providers with the necessary expertise AND evidence-based approach Know community providers’ treatment philosophy; establish collaborative engagement Assess and monitor post-acute providers closely; help determine reasonable/ realistic end-points Identify and manage IW and family expectations Proactively identify and address “red flags” Establish long-term supports to ensure durability of outcomes 30 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Current Trends Innovations in Trauma Care Game changers Questionable The Future Traumatic Brain Injury DOC programs Concussion Awareness/Mgmt Pharmacology Neuro-imaging Apps/Wearable technologies Hyperbaric oxygen Transcranial magnets QEEG/Neurofeedback ‘Brain-training’ Spinal Cord Injury Diaphragmatic pacers Robotics/Exoskeletons Tendon/nerve transfers Spine stimulators Pain pumps Body-weight supported treadmill training Pharmacology Stem cell tx Brain-computer interfaces Major Burns Early excision/closure Critical care medicine advances (e.g., oxandrolone) Temporary skin substitutes (cadaver, pigskin) Artificial skin (CEA) Reconstructive techniques Laser treatments Wound management Hyperbaric oxygen Fluid Resuscitation Pressure Garments Chronic pain RX 3D printing Stem cell tx Transplantation Biomarkers Non-invasive imaging 31 Brain-Computer interfaces Neuro-modulation Genomics Stem Cell tx Biomarkers © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Current Trends Innovations in Trauma Care Game changers Questionable The Future Amputations Myoelectric prostheses “Life-like” prosthetic gloves Osteointegration 3D printerfabricated prostheses Insatiable demand for ‘latest and greatest” Secondary feedback prostheses Direct neural interface prostheses Multiple Trauma Dedicated Trauma Centers Multidisciplinary Approach Limb salvage Outcome Measurement Pain management (interventional, RX) Genetics Limb transplants 32 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Exoskeleton: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOmZx-aE1LM Brain-Computer interface: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inCvbDLfXBo 33 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Direct neural interface prosthesis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=suwZ5D9 bk0M 3D printing for burns: Limb transplant: Face transplant: 34 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary Thank you! Questions? Q&A 35 © Paradigm Outcomes, Proprietary
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