Investigating Clinical and Cost Burdens of Law Enforcement–Related K9 Injuries: The Impact of “the Bite” on a Community Hospital
Author(s) -
Andre V. Coombs,
Stephanie A. EyerlyWebb,
Rachele Solomon,
Rafael Sanchez,
Seong K. Lee,
Eddy H. Carrillo,
Chauniqua Kiffin,
Andrew Rosenthal,
Jill S. Whitehouse,
Barbara Germain,
Dafney L. Davare
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the american surgeon
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.331
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1555-9823
pISSN - 0003-1348
DOI - 10.1177/000313481908500133
Subject(s) - medicine , psychological intervention , medical emergency , law enforcement , trauma center , health care , emergency medicine , nursing , surgery , retrospective cohort study , political science , law
The decision to introduce canines (K9s) to a law enforcement (LE) agency does not typically involve the evaluation of the fiscal or clinical impact on local hospitals. This study compared injury, cost, and care associated with K9s to a common nonlethal force method, the Thomas A Swift Electrical Rifle (TASER), to highlight the cost and resources required to treat both patient types. Patients treated for LE-related K9 and TASER injuries at a Level I community-based trauma center (2011–2016) were evaluated for level of care required (e.g., surgeon/specialist), clinical interventions, proxy medical costs, and length of stay (LOS). Nearly one-third of K9 patients required tertiary-level medical care. The cost of treating the K9-inflicted injuries (n = 75) was almost twice as costly as care for patients subdued with a TASER (n = 80); the K9 patients had significantly (one-tailed t tests) higher medical costs (P = 0.036), required more medical procedures (P = 0.014), and had longer LOS (P = 0.0046) than the TASER patients. Patients with K9 injuries had higher acuity and were significantly more expensive to treat with longer LOS than TASER injuries. LE agencies considering establishing and operating a K9 unit should initiate discussions with their local medical first responders and health-care facilities regarding the capabilities to treat severe K9 injuries to ensure adequate resource allocation.
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