Improving Trauma Surgeons Prospective Estimation of the Injury Severity Score.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY American Surgeon Pub Date : 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1177/00031348241300365
Eli Mlaver, Christopher J Dente, Gina Solomon, Morgan Krause, William Matthew Vassy, S Rob Todd, Patricia Ayoung-Chee
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Abstract

Injury Severity Score (ISS) as a prospective predictive variable is limited, as it is scored post-discharge by registrars. We followed a phase 1 pilot investigation of the feasibility of prospective ISS estimation (eISS) by trauma surgeons within 1 day of admission with an investigation of the impact of a simple educational aid on the accuracy of these estimations. Eleven surgeons evaluated 178 patients in phase 2. With the educational aid, ISS concordance improved from 74.6% to 85.1% for non-severe (abstracted ISS, aISS <16) injuries and from 78.8% to 83.1% for severe (aISS ≥16) injuries; weighted k improved from 0.53 to 0.72. Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) concordance similarly improved in five of seven body regions. The ability to prospectively document ISS has important clinical and research implications. There remains opportunity to refine educational aides and harness the EHR to further improve prediction accuracy and facilitate adoption in standard clinical workflows.

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改进创伤外科医生对损伤严重程度评分的前瞻性估计。
损伤严重程度评分(ISS)作为一种前瞻性预测变量是有限的,因为它是由登记员在出院后评分的。我们对创伤外科医生在患者入院 1 天内进行前瞻性 ISS 评估(eISS)的可行性进行了第一阶段的试点调查,并对简单的教育辅助工具对这些评估准确性的影响进行了调查。在第二阶段,11 名外科医生对 178 名患者进行了评估。使用教育辅助工具后,ISS的一致性从74.6%提高到85.1%,非重度(抽象ISS,aISS k从0.53提高到0.72)的一致性从74.6%提高到85.1%。在七个身体区域中,有五个区域的简易损伤量表(AIS)一致性同样得到了提高。前瞻性记录 ISS 的能力具有重要的临床和研究意义。我们仍有机会改进教学辅助工具并利用电子病历进一步提高预测准确性,促进标准临床工作流程的采用。
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来源期刊
American Surgeon
American Surgeon 医学-外科
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
623
期刊介绍: The American Surgeon is a monthly peer-reviewed publication published by the Southeastern Surgical Congress. Its area of concentration is clinical general surgery, as defined by the content areas of the American Board of Surgery: alimentary tract (including bariatric surgery), abdomen and its contents, breast, skin and soft tissue, endocrine system, solid organ transplantation, pediatric surgery, surgical critical care, surgical oncology (including head and neck surgery), trauma and emergency surgery, and vascular surgery.
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