Ninety-four consecutive elderly patients with blunt trauma injuries we
re studied to determine what impact advanced age had on patient outcom
e. The current study included patients ranging from 65 to 100 years of
age who were admitted to our service from July 1986 to December 1988.
Follow-up evaluation was conducted on all patients one to three years
after the patient was discharged from the hospital. Seventy-six of th
e patients were injured as a result of automobile related accidents an
d 18 were injured as a result of a fall. Fifty-six of the 94 patients
required admission to the intensive care unit. There was an average of
3.4 operations per patient in this group. Twelve of the 94 patients d
ied; six within the first 48 hours of hospitalization. More than 70 pe
rcent of the survivors were able to function independently after disch
arge from the hospital. Twelve of the 22 patients who required institu
tional care after discharge from the hospital were eventually able to
return home. A prolonged stay in intensive care was not associated wit
h an unfavorable long term outlook. This high hospital survival rate (
87 percent) and percentage of patients living independently at home af
ter hospitalization (87 percent) suggests that the expenditure of exte
nsive resources for the care of the elderly trauma patient is worthwhi
le.