Are severely injured trauma victims in Norway offered advanced pre‐hospital care? National, retrospective, observational cohort
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND Studies of severely injured patients suggest that advanced pre-hospital care and/or rapid transportation provides a survival benefit. This benefit depends on the disposition of resources to patients with the greatest need. Norway has 19 Emergency Helicopters (HEMS) staffed by anaesthesiologists on duty 24/7/365. National regulations describe indications for their use, and the use of the national emergency medical dispatch guideline is recommended. We assessed whether severely injured patients had been treated or transported by advanced resources on a national scale. METHODS A national survey was conducted collecting data for 2013 from local trauma registries at all hospitals caring for severely injured patients. Patients were analysed according to hospital level; trauma centres or acute care hospitals with trauma functions. Patients with an Injury Severity Score (ISS) > 15 were considered severely injured. RESULTS Three trauma centres (75%) and 17 acute care hospitals (53%) had data for trauma patients from 2013, a total of 3535 trauma registry entries (primary admissions only), including 604 victims with an ISS > 15. Of these 604 victims, advanced resources were treating and/or transporting 51%. Sixty percent of the severely injured admitted directly to trauma centres received advanced services, while only 37% of the severely injured admitted primarily to acute care hospitals received these services. CONCLUSION A highly developed and widely distributed HEMS system reached only half of severely injured trauma victims in Norway in 2013.
منابع مشابه
Significance of a Level-2, "selective, secondary evacuation" hospital during a peripheral town terrorist attack.
INTRODUCTION Mass-casualty incidents (MCIs) can occur outside of major metropolitan areas. In such circumstances, the nearest hospital seldom is a Level-1 Trauma Center. Moreover, emergency medical services (EMS) capabilities in such areas tend to be limited, which may compromise prehospital care and evacuation speed. The objective of this study was to extract lessons learned from the medical r...
متن کاملHealth systems research initiative to tackle growing road traffic injuries in India
Road traffic injuries (RTIs) are the sixth leading cause of deaths in India and about 400 deaths take place every day due to road traffic accidents. The present paper analyses the data of the India’s National Crime Record Bureau (NCRB) to assess the burden of RTI. In addition, it reports the health systems research initiated by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR). As per NCRB data, in...
متن کاملDo pre-hospital anaesthesiologists reliably predict mortality using the NACA severity score? A retrospective cohort study
INTRODUCTION The National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics' (NACA) severity score is widely used in pre-hospital emergency medicine to grade the severity of illness or trauma in patient groups but is scarcely validated. The aim of this study was to assess the score's ability to predict mortality and need for advanced in-hospital interventions in a cohort from one anaesthesiologist-manned helic...
متن کاملارزیابی نقش آموزش پیشگیری و مراقبت از مصدوم ترومایی به مردم و شبکههای بهداشت روستایی در سالهای 80 تا 1384
Assessment of the Role of Prevention Training and Care in Trauma Patients in Rural Regions 2001-2005 Saghafi Nia M1, Nafissi N2, Morovvati S3, Asadollahi R2, Panahi F1 1 Trauma Research Center, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran 2 Iranian Mine Victim Rescue Center (IMC), Tehran, Iran 3 Research Center of Molecular Biology, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehr...
متن کاملNorwegian trauma care: a national cross-sectional survey of all hospitals involved in the management of major trauma patients
BACKGROUND Approximately 10% of the Norwegian population is injured every year, with injuries ranging from minor injuries treated by general practitioners to major and complex injuries requiring specialist in-hospital care. There is a lack of knowledge concerning the caseload of potentially severely injured patients in Norwegian hospitals. Aim of the study was to describe the current status of ...
متن کامل