Socioeconomic factors in inflicted traumatic brain injury: Examining the area deprivation index.

Angela H Lee, William A Anastasiadis, Stephanie A Hitti, Amy K Connery
Author Information
  1. Angela H Lee: Children's Hospital Colorado. ORCID
  2. William A Anastasiadis: Children's Hospital Colorado.
  3. Stephanie A Hitti: Children's Hospital Colorado.
  4. Amy K Connery: Children's Hospital Colorado.

Abstract

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE: Inflicted traumatic brain injury (iTBI), or abusive head injury, is a common cause of mortality and disability among infants and toddlers. Social determinants of health (SDoH) have a critical and multifaceted impact on iTBI, influencing both prevalence and outcomes. The area deprivation index (ADI) is a comprehensive metric of SDoH developed to assist in understanding how community-level socioeconomic factors influence patient outcomes. The current study sought to describe the sociodemographic characteristics, including ADI, of a cohort of 373 infants and young children who sustained an iTBI.
RESEARCH METHOD/DESIGN: This study was a retrospective analysis utilizing a cohort of pediatric patients treated for iTBI at a large, tertiary care children's hospital serving seven states in the Rocky Mountain region.
RESULTS: Mortality prevalence was higher among older children, and older children were more likely to have a longer stay in the pediatric intensive care unit. Children who were identified as Hispanic/Latino lived in areas with greater socioeconomic disadvantage than children identified as non-Hispanic/Latino. Specifically, participants who were identified as White Hispanic/Latino lived in areas with greater disadvantage than children who were identified as White non-Hispanic/Latino. There were no other significant differences by race. Contrary to hypotheses, ADI was not significantly related to mortality, injury severity, or follow-up visits.
CONCLUSIONS/IMPLICATIONS: While SDoH are known to influence outcomes in iTBI, it may be necessary to incorporate individual or family-level SDoH variables within this clinical sample and examine the interaction between individual and community-level factors. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Grants

  1. /Ray E. Helfer Society
  2. UL1 TR002535/NCATS NIH HHS
  3. /University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; Department of Rehabilitation; Kempe Center
  4. /Translational Sciences Institute (CCTSI)
  5. /National Institutes of Health; NCATS
  6. /National Foundation to End Child Abuse and Neglect (ENDCAN)

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0iTBIchildrenSDoHidentifiedinjuryoutcomesADIfactorstraumaticbrainmortalityamonginfantsprevalenceareadeprivationindexcommunity-levelsocioeconomicinfluencestudycohortpediatriccareolderHispanic/Latinolivedareasgreaterdisadvantagenon-Hispanic/LatinoWhiteindividualPURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:InflictedabusiveheadcommoncausedisabilitytoddlersSocialdeterminantshealthcriticalmultifacetedimpactinfluencingcomprehensivemetricdevelopedassistunderstandingpatientcurrentsoughtdescribesociodemographiccharacteristicsincluding373youngsustainedRESEARCHMETHOD/DESIGN:retrospectiveanalysisutilizingpatientstreatedlargetertiarychildren'shospitalservingsevenstatesRockyMountainregionRESULTS:MortalityhigherlikelylongerstayintensiveunitChildrenSpecificallyparticipantssignificantdifferencesraceContraryhypothesessignificantlyrelatedseverityfollow-upvisitsCONCLUSIONS/IMPLICATIONS:knownmaynecessaryincorporatefamily-levelvariableswithinclinicalsampleexamineinteractionPsycInfoDatabaseRecordc2024APArightsreservedSocioeconomicinflictedinjury:Examining

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