Title: Seat Belts Payer
1Estimated Medical Cost Savings from Standard Seat
Belt Law in Maine Impact on MaineCare,
Uninsured, and Commercial/Employer From the
Maine CODES (Crash Outcome Data Evaluation
System) Project
2Who paid for the hospitalization costs for
unbelted drivers? Maine CODES data 1995-2001
- Unbelted occupants were more likely to be
uninsured (20 vs 11) or covered by Medicaid /
MaineCare (10 vs 6) than belted occupants.
Similar results were found in study by the South
Carolina CODES Project. The economic impact of
motor vehicle crashes the cost of restrained
versus unrestrained occupants in South Carolina.
Gill, et.al. Am. Surg. 2002. 68(6)569-74.
3Summary
- States with standard seat belt laws have higher
use rates compared to states with secondary laws.
- Maines seat belt use rate is lower than the
national average. - Previous Maine CODES studies show that in Maine
seat belts reduced the risk of injury and cost
associated with injury. - Medical Cost Savings Study
- This study used statewide hospital data, Maine
CODES data, and related references to estimate
the potential impact of a change to a standard
belt use law in Maine on medical costs. - Results indicate a standard belt law would
- Over a five-year period 2005-2009, save 12
million 3 million for MaineCare, 1 million for
uninsured, 8 million for commercial / employer
insurance. - These results may underestimate the total medical
cost savings when other factors are taken into
consideration.
4Medicaid / MaineCare Maine Hospital Use for
Drivers and Passengers in Motor Vehicle Traffic
Accidents Age 16 and Older (source MHDO data
files)
5Commercial / Employer InsuredMaine Hospital Use
for Drivers and Passengers in Motor Vehicle
Traffic Accidents Age 16 and Older (source MHDO
data files)
6Uninsured (Self-Pay)Maine Hospital Use for
Drivers and Passengers in Motor Vehicle Traffic
Accidents Age 16 and Older (source MHDO data
files)
72002 Hospital Use by TBI and Discharge
StatusMaine Hospital Use for Drivers and
Passengers in Motor Vehicle Traffic Accidents Age
16 and Older (source MHDO data files)
8MaineCare Estimated 5-Year Medical Cost Savings
Resulting from Maine Standard Seat Belt Law
9Maine Payer Summary Estimated 5-Year Cumulative
Medical Cost Savings Resulting from Maine
Standard Seat Belt Law
10Methods
- Data Source
- Inpatient discharges and emergency department
visits with ICD-9 Ecode indicating driver or
passenger in motor vehicle traffic accident and
age 16 or older. Source Maine Health Data
Organization data files. - Maine CODES (Crash Outcome Data Evaluation
System) linked files - Reporting
- By year, payer, primary diagnosis of traumatic
brain injury (TBI), and hospital charges. - Additional information used to estimates cost
savings - Belt use and relative risk of emergency
department visit or hospitalization using Maine
CODES analysis. - Expected increase in belt use rate based on CDC,
MMWR report. - Post-discharge long term costs for TBI based on
Craig Institute and Preusser Research Group, Inc.
methods. - Medical inflation based on BLS, CPI estimates.
11Estimating Cost Savings Data and Assumptions
- 2002 (most current MHDO complete year available)
used as source - Patient hospitalized with TBI will incur 40,348
in addition to hospital cost during first year
(Craig Institute) - Patient hospitalized with TBI will incur 26,871
during each subsequent year post-hospitalization
and Medicaid will pick up additional cases of TBI
in subsequent year resulting in a doubling of
number of cases (Preusser Group). This applied
to Medicaid/MaineCare only since TBI patients
initially covered by commercial insurance or
uninsured may have been covered by Medicaid /
MaineCare during subsequent years. - Seat belts relative risk of emergency department
visit (0.84), non-TBI hospitalization (0.58), and
TBI hospitalization (0.47) (source Maine CODES
project estimates adjusted for other crash
factors using logistic regression). - Patients who died during hospitalization were
reported separately and only there
hospitalization charges included. - Enactment of a standard belt law in Maine during
2005 might increase belt use by 11 (CDC MMWR
publication) - Medical charges were inflated by 4 per year (BLS
CPI data)
12Are these cost savings estimates too low?
- These estimates represent hospital charges and do
not include the physician and other professional
services, pharmacy, or dental costs that may be
associated with these injuries during the first
year and subsequent years. - No subsequent costs for patients with emergency
department visits or non-TBI inpatient
hospitalizations were made. These patients may
go on to have surgery or other medical care
resulting from their injuries. - These estimates assume that MaineCare and
Uninsured have the same safety belt use rate as
other Maine residents. If MaineCare and
Uninsured have lower safety use rates, the
potential for reduced injury rate and cost with a
standard belt law might be larger for those
residents. - These estimates of subsequent medical cost
associated with TBI may be too low. Brain
injuries (TBI) are expensive and it is estimated
that the lifetime 600,000 to 1.9 million (
source NIH Consensus Panel on Brain Injury) - Annual average cost for TBI patients could be
determined directly from MaineCare claims data. - A spill over effect on belt and safety seat use
for children. About 14 percent of the MaineCare
hospitalizations for traffic accidents were for
children age 15 and under. - Our inflation indicator for medical services was
4 percent. This could be increased if we
utilized the hospital service component CPI which
is running at a higher percentage than
professional services.
13References