Impacts of Financial Assistance on Quality of Life Among People Living With Burn Injury: Matched Cohort Analysis of the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research Burn Model System Database

Author:

Martz Flora1,McMullen Kara A23,Carrougher Gretchen J2,Bunnell Aaron2,Sheckter Clifford C4,Wolf Steven E56,Schneider Jeffrey C7,Stewart Barclay T28

Affiliation:

1. Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine , Rochester, Michigan , USA

2. UW Medicine Regional Burn Center, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington , Seattle , USA

3. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle , USA

4. Department of Surgery, Stanford University , California , USA

5. Department of Surgery, The University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston , USA

6. Shriners Children’s, Texas , Galveston , USA

7. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School , Boston , USA

8. Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center , Seattle, Washington , USA

Abstract

Abstract Disparities in socioeconomic status and minority status affect the risk of burn injury and the severity of that injury, thus affecting the subsequent cost of care. We aimed to characterize the demographic details surrounding receipt of financial assistance due to burn injury and its relationship with health-related quality of life scores. Participants ≥18 from Burn Model System National Longitudinal Database (BMS) with complete demographic data were included (n = 4330). Nonresponders to financial assistance questions were analyzed separately. The remaining sample (n = 1255) was divided into participants who received financial assistance because of burn injury, those who received no financial assistance, and those who received financial assistance before injury and as a result of injury. A demographic and injury-characteristic comparison was conducted. Health-related quality of life metrics (Satisfaction with Life, Short Form-12/Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey, Community Integration Questionnaire Social Component, and the Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory) were analyzed preinjury, then 6-months, 1-year, and 2-years postinjury. A matched cohort analysis compared these scores. When compared to their no financial assistance counterparts, participants receiving financial assistance due to burns were more likely to be minorities (19% vs 14%), have more severe injuries (%TBSA burn 21% vs 10%), and receive workers’ compensation (24% vs 9%). They also had lower health-related quality of life scores on all metrics except the post-traumatic growth inventory. Financial assistance may aid in combating disparities in posttraumatic growth scores for participants at the greatest risk of financial toxicity but does not improve other health-related quality of life metrics.

Funder

National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference46 articles.

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2. An intervention bundle to facilitate return to work for burn-injured workers: report from a burn model system investigation;Carrougher;J Burn Care Res,2017

3. An examination of factors that affect return to work following burns: a systematic review of the literature;Quinn;Burns,2010

4. Financial toxicity, Part I: a new name for a growing problem;Zafar;Oncology (Williston Park),2013

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