miércoles, 10 de agosto de 2016

Sports-Related Emergency Department Visits and Hospital Inpatient Stays, 2013 #207

Sports-Related Emergency Department Visits and Hospital Inpatient Stays, 2013 #207

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August 9, 2016, Issue #529

AHRQ Stats: Medical Care for Sports Injuries

In 2013, bicycle riding was the most common reason for hospital stays and emergency department visits among males ages 18 to 64. It was also the most common reason for hospital stays among females ages 18 to 44 that year. (Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Statistical Brief #207: Sports-Related Emergency Department Visits and Hospital Inpatient Stays, 2013.)
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Highlights
  • The most common sports-related reasons for hospital use were bicycling, and walking, marching, and hiking. In 2013, bicycling accounted for 383,790 ED visits and 26,530 hospital stays. Walking, marching, and hiking resulted in 340,290 ED visits and 30,650 hospital stays.


  • Other top-ranked reasons for sport-related hospital use were basketball, football, school recess and summer camp, running, roller skating and skateboarding, soccer (ED only), baseball (ED only), downhill skiing and snowboarding (inpatient only), and horseback riding (inpatient only).


  • Among children, the most common sports-related reasons for hospital stays and ED visits included American tackle football (boys only), bicycle riding, and school recess and summer camp activities.


  • Bicycle riding was the most common sports-related reason for hospital stays and ED visits among males aged 18-64 years and females aged 18-44 years (inpatient only). Walking, marching, and hiking was the most common sports-related reason among males aged 65+ years and females aged 18-44 years (ED only) and 45+ years.


  • Sport-related hospital stays were primarily for fractures (59 percent of all sports-related stays) and intracranial injury (11 percent). Sports-related ED visits were for sprains (24 percent of all sports-related ED visits), fractures (21 percent), superficial injuries (18 percent), and open wounds (12 percent).

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