prehospital management of gunshot patients at major trauma care centers: exploring the gaps in patient care
Authors
abstract
background prehospital management of gunshot-wounded (gw) patients influences injury-induced morbidity and mortality. objectives to evaluate prehospital management to gw patients emphasizing the protocol of patient transfer to appropriate centers. patients and methods this prospective study, included all gw patients referred to four major, level-i hospitals in mashhad, iran. we evaluated demographic data, triage, transport vehicles of patients, hospitalization time and the outcome. results there were 66 gw patients. the most affected body parts were extremities (60.6%, n = 40); 59% of cases (n = 39) were transferred to the hospitals with vehicles other than an ambulance. furthermore, 77.3% of patients came to the hospitals directly from the site of event, and 22.7% of patients were referred from other medical centers. ems action intervals from dispatchers to scene departure was not significantly different from established standards; however, arrival to hospital took longer than optimal standards. additionally, time spent at emergency wards to stabilize vital signs was significantly less in patients who were transported by ems ambulances (p = 0.01), but not with private ambulances (p = 0.47). however, ambulance pre-hospital care was not associated with a shorter hospital stay. injury severity was the only determinant of hospital stay duration (β = 0.36, p = 0.01) in multivariate analysis. conclusions gw was more frequent in extremities and the most patients were directly transferred from the accident site. ems (but not private) ambulance transport improved patients' emergency care and standard time intervals were achieved by ems; however more than a half of the cases were transferred by vehicles other than an ambulance. nevertheless, ambulance transportation (either by ems or by private ambulance) was not associated with a shorter hospital stay. this showed that upgrade of ambulance equipment and training of private ambulance personnel may be needed.
similar resources
Prehospital Management of Gunshot Patients at Major Trauma Care Centers: Exploring the Gaps in Patient Care
BACKGROUND Prehospital management of gunshot-wounded (GW) patients influences injury-induced morbidity and mortality. OBJECTIVES To evaluate prehospital management to GW patients emphasizing the protocol of patient transfer to appropriate centers. PATIENTS AND METHODS This prospective study, included all GW patients referred to four major, level-I hospitals in Mashhad, Iran. We evaluated de...
full textsevere cranioencephalic trauma: prehospital care, surgical management and multimodal monitoring
traumatic brain injury is a leading cause of death in developed countries. it is estimated that only in the united states about 100,000 people die annually in parallel among the survivors there is a significant number of people with disabilities with significant costs for the health system. it has been determined that after moderate and severe traumatic injury, brain parenchyma is affected by m...
full textPrehospital trauma care services in developing countries
Trauma is a leading cause of death and disability especially amongst young people. Prehospital trauma care service remains a dynamic field of medicine for care of trauma patients. The goal of prehospital emergency care system should be to match the needs of the patients to the available resources so that optimal, prompt and cost-effective care can be offered. For bridging the wide gap between t...
full textInternational comparison of prehospital trauma care systems.
OBJECTIVE Given the recent emphasis on developing prehospital trauma care globally, we embarked upon a multicentre study to compare trauma patients' outcome within and between countries with technician-operated advanced life support (ALS) and physician-operated (Doc-ALS) emergency medical service (EMS) systems. These environments represent the continuum of prehospital care in high income countr...
full textMulticenter Canadian study of prehospital trauma care.
OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether the type of on-site care a trauma patient receives affects outcome. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The controversy regarding the prehospital care of trauma patients between Advanced Life Support (ALS) and Basic Life Support (BLS) is ongoing. Due to this unresolved controversy, as well as historical, cultural, and political factors, there are significant variations with ...
full textUsing advanced simulation for recognition and correction of gaps in airway and breathing management skills in prehospital trauma care.
In this prospective study, we used two full-scale prehospital trauma scenarios (severe chest injury and severe head injury) and checklists of specific actions, reflecting essential actions for a safe treatment and successful outcome, were used to assess performance of postinternship physician graduates of the Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) course. In the first 36 participants, simulated tr...
full textMy Resources
Save resource for easier access later
Journal title:
trauma monthlyجلد ۱۸، شماره ۲، صفحات ۶۲-۶۶
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023