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    Patients value their own pain over braking safety when deciding when to return to driving: a discrete choice experiment on lower extremity injuries.

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    Author
    DeLeon, Genaro A
    Rolle, Nicholas P
    Burke, Cynthia E
    McKegg, Phillip C
    Hannan, Zachary D
    Ghulam, Qasim M
    Gupta, Jayesh
    Bangura, Abdulai
    O'Connor, Katherine C
    Slobogean, Gerard P
    O'Toole, Robert V
    O'Hara, Nathan N
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    Date
    2022-07-07
    Journal
    OTA international : the open access journal of orthopaedic trauma
    Type
    Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    See at
    https://doi.org/10.1097/OI9.0000000000000206
    Abstract
    Objective: To quantify patient preferences towards time to return to driving relative to compromised reaction time and potential complication risks. Design: Cross-sectional discrete choice experiment. Setting: Academic trauma center. Patients: Ninety-six adult patients with an operative lower extremity fracture from December 2019 through December 2020. Intervention: None. Main outcome measurement: Patient completed a discrete choice experiment survey consisting of 12 hypothetical return to driving scenarios with varied attributes: time to return to driving (range: 1 to 6 months), risk of implant failure (range: 1% to 12%), pain upon driving return (range: none to severe), and driving safety measured by braking distance (range: 0 to 40 feet at 60 mph). The relative importance of each attribute is reported on a scale of 0% to 100%. Results: Patients most valued a reduced pain level when resuming driving (62%), followed by the risk of implant failure (17%), time to return to driving (13%), and braking safety (8%). Patients were indifferent to returning to driving at 1 month (median utility: 28, interquartile range [IQR] -31 to 80) or 2 months (median utility: 59, IQR: 41 to 91) postinjury. Conclusion: Patients with lower extremity injuries demonstrated a willingness to forego earlier return to driving if it might mean a decrease in their pain level. Patients are least concerned about their driving safety, instead placing higher value on their own pain level and chance of implant failure. The findings of this study are the first to rigorously quantify patient preferences toward a return to driving and heterogeneity in patient preferences.
    Rights/Terms
    Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Orthopaedic Trauma Association.
    Keyword
    braking safety
    driving safety
    implant failure
    lower extremity
    pain
    patient preferences
    return to driving
    Identifier to cite or link to this item
    http://hdl.handle.net/10713/20259
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1097/OI9.0000000000000206
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