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I subscribe to everything related to health and stroke, and this article amazed even me, who rarely gets shocked anymore. 

 
This article by Jenna Basset appeared in General Surgery News: Futile Trauma Transfers Uncommon but Costly. The reprint follows here; rather blasting comments appear at the end. 
Despite making up less than 2% of trauma transfers, unsalvageable patients present a significant cost burden to the health care system, researchers report. 
Researchers at the University of Kansas Medical Center (KUMC) investigated the rates and costs of futile transfers within their organization between June 2017 and June 2019. Futility was defined as a patient who had a stay that was no more than 48 hours that resulted in death, implementation of hospice care or discharge with no major operative, endoscopic or radiological intervention. 
Within the study period, there were 1,241 trauma transfers. Among the 407 trauma transfers with hospitalization time less than 48 hours, 18 patients (1.5% of the study population) were deemed futile. In both the futile and nonfutile groups, the majority of patients were transferred for traumatic brain injury and the need for neurosurgical consultation or intervention. 
The researchers evaluated injury severity among transferred patients using the Injury Severity Score (Iss), a validated score that correlates with morbidity, mortality and hospitalization time after trauma. Scores above 15 indicate severe injury. image Futile transfers were older, with more severe injuries as indicated by a median Iss of 21 versus 8 in nonfutile patients. 
Specifically, futile patients had more severe injuries to the head and torso. The median cost of treating futile patients was $56,396, and the total cost to the health care system exceeded $1.7 million during the two-year study period. 
The authors estimated that elimination of futile transfers would result in a cost savings of over $27 million annually in the United States. 
“Our study clearly has limitations in that our data represents the retrospective experience of a single institution serving a large network of rural referral facilities,” explained presenting author Craig Follette, DO, a general surgery resident at KUMC, in Kansas City. “The data may not be able to be generalized to other trauma networks but could be compared to similar regional networks.” 
Dr. Follette also added that the study definition of futile was conservative, which may affect study conclusions, and the data do not show the intricacies of what occurs in the period surrounding a trauma transfer. 
“It is possible that patients received therapies not available at referral centers, although, in our experience, this would be extremely unlikely in the absence of ongoing consultant care.” 
To optimize trauma transfer, the researchers propose a new trauma transfer paradigm that incorporates a telehealth support component that could be used to extend specialist support to critical access hospitals. 
“While beyond the scope of this paper, we believe that this future state will involve enhanced means of communication through telehealth/tele-trauma, and the overall sharing of Level I trauma center expertise beyond the walls of the center itself,” Dr. Follette said. “I believe the next step is collaboration with other centers in multicenter studies to truly define this special patient population and guide further resource utilization region by region.” 
The authors concluded that additional work is needed to avoid futile care and ensure appropriate allocation of health care resources to patients who will benefit. 
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Let me tell a story to set up my comments. A college friend 50 years ago (this is a whopper of a story accounting for why I remember it) told me that her husband’s grandmother was dying and was in hospice at the facility in Florida. He lived in Pennsylvania, but his brother was a Florida resident. The two of them came up with a plan. Since grandma was at death’s door and lived in a ritzy apartment, her hubby took a car trip and a huge trailer to Florida, met his brother, and went to Grandma’s apartment to divvy up whatever appealed most to each of them. Even the marble floor was chipped away carefully. 
After they were done, with the large apartment empty and satisfied with their “inheritance,” her hubby took the car and the trailer back to Pennsylvania where he unloaded all the wonderful contents. He placed them in his gorgeous house, even the marble floor.
One problem: their grandmother lived, survived hospice care, and stayed in the hospital until she strong enough to return. Her hubby took all the contents back to Florida, even the marble floor. His brother did the same, too, and “restored” her apartment with the same things two weeks after they had taken them. 
Lesson: Just because the person appears “futile,” the life is over when it’s over, not a second before. 
“Futility was defined as a patient who had a stay that was no more than 48 hours that resulted in death, implementation of hospice care or discharge with no major operative, endoscopic or radiological intervention” and is pointless. 
If that were the case, I wouldn’t be here today because “no major operative, endoscopic or radiological intervention” in under 48 hours was done. The doctor had enough compassion to wait, and that waiting saved me. 
Every hospital should try, by any means and no time factor present, to keep the patient alive. That person is someone’s parent or sibling or cousin or friend or colleague. 
Yogi Berra, celebrated baseball played and New York Yankees manager, is said to have originated the phrase “The game isn’t over till it’s over.”
Exactly my point, Yogi.  
Joyce Hoffman

Joyce Hoffman

Joyce Hoffman is one of the world's top 10 stroke bloggers according to the Medical News Today. You can find the original post and other blogs Joyce wrote in Tales of a Stroke Survivor. (https://talesofastrokesurvivor.blog)
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