Review of a large trauma registry in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: insights into prehospital care and provider training for trauma quality improvement.

IF 2.1 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open Pub Date : 2024-05-21 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1136/tsaco-2024-001453
Nichole Starr, Mengistu Ayehu, Alex Zhuang, Habtamu Tamiru Minalu, Genet Kifle Alemu, Samuel Fisseha, Sisay Chekol, Aklile Habtemariam, Makida Hadis, Biruh Alemtsehay, Minale Mengiste, Ashenafi Kefeni Bori
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Abstract

Background: Injury is a major cause of death and disability in Ethiopia. ALERT Hospital, one of only three designated trauma centers in the country, has employed a basic trauma registry since its inception in 2016; however, these data had not been used. In joint efforts with the Federal Ministry of Health, we aimed to understand patient injury characteristics and predictors of mortality, to inform priorities in resource and training investments.

Methods: Data from 12 816 consecutive patients in the first 3 years of the trauma registry were reviewed retrospectively. Modified Early Warning Score was used at triage to indicate injury severity (red=critically injured, green=minor injury). No physiologic data for calculating Injury Severity Scores or in-hospital intervention data were available. Triage groups were compared and multivariate logistic regression conducted to determine predictors of in-emergency department (ED) mortality.

Results: Most patients presented with minor injuries with 64.7% triaged as 'yellow' and 16.4% triaged as 'green', and most (75.9%) referred from another facility. Of those who were critically injured, only 31.0% arrived by ambulance. Most injuries were soft tissue (51.1%) and fractures (23.0%); when stratified by triage category, most critical ('red') patients had sustained head injuries (52.7%). Arrival by ambulance (OR 2.20, p=0.017) and head injury (OR 3.11, p<0.001) were independent predictors of death in the ED.

Conclusion: This study of injured patients presenting to an Ethiopian trauma center is one of the largest to date, highlighting the need for more accessible and streamlined prehospital trauma care. Opportunities for improvement include staff training in initial trauma management and implementation of a more comprehensive trauma registry containing physiologic, intervention, and outcomes data to support a robust quality improvement program. Efforts by the Federal Ministry of Health are ongoing to support these improvements in care.

Level of evidence: Level 3, observational study.

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埃塞俄比亚亚的斯亚贝巴大型创伤登记处回顾:院前护理和提供者培训对提高创伤质量的启示。
背景:在埃塞俄比亚,伤害是导致死亡和残疾的主要原因。ALERT医院是该国仅有的三家指定创伤中心之一,自2016年成立以来一直采用基本的创伤登记制度;然而,这些数据尚未得到利用。在与联邦卫生部的共同努力下,我们旨在了解患者的损伤特征和死亡率预测因素,为资源和培训投资的优先顺序提供信息:我们对创伤登记处头三年的 12 816 名连续患者的数据进行了回顾性审查。在分诊时使用改良早期预警评分(Modified Early Warning Score)来显示受伤严重程度(红色=重伤,绿色=轻伤)。没有用于计算损伤严重程度评分的生理数据或院内干预数据。对分诊组别进行了比较,并进行了多变量逻辑回归,以确定急诊科(ED)死亡率的预测因素:大多数患者为轻伤,64.7%的患者被分流为 "黄色",16.4%的患者被分流为 "绿色",大多数患者(75.9%)是从其他机构转来的。在重伤患者中,只有 31.0% 是乘坐救护车前来就诊的。大多数伤情为软组织损伤(51.1%)和骨折(23.0%);如果按分流类别进行分层,大多数危重病人("红色")头部受伤(52.7%)。救护车到达(OR 2.20,p=0.017)和头部受伤(OR 3.11,p 结论:这项针对前往埃塞俄比亚创伤中心就诊的伤员的研究是迄今为止规模最大的研究之一,凸显了院前创伤护理更便捷、更简化的必要性。需要改进的地方包括对员工进行创伤初期管理培训,以及实施包含生理、干预和结果数据的更全面的创伤登记制度,以支持强有力的质量改进计划。联邦卫生部正在努力支持这些护理改进工作:证据等级:3 级,观察性研究。
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CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.00%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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