Jack H Scaife, Christopher E Clinker, Abigail J Alexander, Stephanie E Iantorno, R Scott Eldredge, Robert A Swendiman, Stephen J Fenton, Katie W Russell
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: The Utah Pediatric Trauma Network (UPTN), established in 2019, is a collaboration of hospitals that have implemented guidelines to optimize pediatric trauma care. The purpose of this study was to determine whether preventable transfer (PT) rates decreased following the establishment of the UTPN and what hospital characteristics were associated with decreased preventable transfers.
Methods: Children with traumatic injuries transferred from hospitals in the UPTN to the state's only Level I Pediatric Trauma Center between 2013 and 2023 were retrospectively analyzed. A PT was a child discharged within 48 h of arrival without surgical intervention or advanced imaging studies. The main hospital-level outcome measure was an overall decrease in PT after the UPTN establishment in 2019.
Results: After 2019, 34 of the 46 hospitals meeting inclusion criteria saw a decrease in the percentage of PTs, while 12 saw an increase in PT rate, with an overall median change of -7 % (IQR -14 %, 0 %). We observed that hospitals with decreased PT had higher rates of PT before the establishment of the UPTN and had higher overall transfer volume than hospitals without a decreased PT rate. Can we put the overall p value in this?
Conclusion: Most hospitals were able to successfully decrease PT rates following the creation of the UPTN. More smaller hospitals did not successfully decrease PT, so more work may need to be done to target lower-volume hospitals.
期刊介绍:
The journal presents original contributions as well as a complete international abstracts section and other special departments to provide the most current source of information and references in pediatric surgery. The journal is based on the need to improve the surgical care of infants and children, not only through advances in physiology, pathology and surgical techniques, but also by attention to the unique emotional and physical needs of the young patient.