Frequency of neuroimaging for pediatric minor brain injury is determined by the primary treating medical department

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Abstract

To investigate the use of neuroimaging in children and adolescents with minor brain injury in pediatric and non-pediatric departments.In this observational cohort study data were extracted from a large German statutory health insurance (AOK Plus Dresden ∼3.1 million clients) in a 7-year period (2010-2016). All patients with International Classification of Diseases (ICD) code S06.0 (concussion; minor brain injury; commotio cerebri) aged ≤ 18 years were included. Demographic and clinical data were analyzed by logistic regression analysis for associations with the use of CT and MRI (independent variables: gender, age, length of stay, pediatric vs non-pediatric department, university vs non-university hospital).A total of 14,805 children with minor brain injuries (mean age 6.0±5.6; 45.5% females) were included. Treatment was provided by different medical departments: Pediatrics (N=8717; 59%), Pediatric Surgery (N=3582, 24%), General Surgery (N=2197, 15%), Orthopedic Trauma Surgery (N=309, 2.1%). Patients admitted to pediatric departments (Pediatrics and Pediatric Surgery) underwent head CT-imaging significantly less frequently (3.8%) compared to patients treated in non-pediatric departments (18.5%; P

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Klora, M., Zeidler, J., Bassler, S., Hirsch, F. W., Gosemann, J. H., Lacher, M., & Zimmermann, P. (2019). Frequency of neuroimaging for pediatric minor brain injury is determined by the primary treating medical department. Medicine (United States), 98(28). https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000016320

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