Can Military Role 1 Practitioners Maintain Their Skills Working at Civilian Level 1 Trauma Centers: A Retrospective, Cross-Sectional Study.

Joshua A Krieger, Steven A Radloff, Nathan J White, Steven G Schauer
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Abstract

Background: Introduction: Military Role 1 practitioners have difficulty maintaining skill competency by working solely in military medical treatment facilities. Recognizing this, the Army Medical Department has renewed focus on physician specialty-specific Individual Critical Task Lists (ICTL) and is increasing the number of military-civilian partnerships, wherein small military treatment teams work full-time in civilian trauma centers. Yet, data to validate this approach is lacking. We hypothesize military Role 1 practitioners working full-time at a civilian Level 1 trauma center would attain similar resuscitation-specific procedural frequency to providers deployed to an active combat zone, and use the emergency medicine (EM) ICTL to compare select procedural frequency between a cohort of trauma patients from a civilian Level 1 trauma center and a cohort of combat casualties from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DODTR).

Methods: We compared a selected subset of critically-injured, military-aged (18-35 years) trauma patients who were seen in a Level I Trauma Center emergency department (ED) between January 1, 2016 and December 31, 2017 and dispositioned directly either to the operating room, intensive care unit, or morgue to a selected cohort from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DODTR) who were seen in EDs in Iraq and Afghanistan between January 2007 and August 2016 using descriptive statistics. The primary outcome was the frequency of ICTL procedures performed, and the secondary outcome was injury severity.

Results: We identified 843 civilian patients meeting inclusion criteria, of 1,719 military-aged patients captured by the trauma registry during the study. The selected cohort from the DODTR included 27,359 patients. Demographics were similar between the 2 groups, except the DODTR cohort included significantly more patients with blast trauma (55% versus 0.4%). We found similar ICTL procedural frequency (1 procedure for every 1.84 patients in the civilian cohort compared to one procedure/1.52 patients in the military cohort).

Conclusion: Role-1 ICTL trauma procedures were performed at similar frequencies between civilian patients seen at a Level 1 trauma center and combat casualties. With proper practice implementation, the opportunity exists for Role 1 practitioners to maintain their trauma resuscitation skills at civilian trauma centers.

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军事角色1从业者能否在民用一级创伤中心保持他们的技能:一项回顾性横断面研究。
背景:简介:军事角色1从业人员很难保持技能能力,仅在军事医疗设施工作。认识到这一点,陆军医学部重新将重点放在医生专业特定的个人关键任务清单(ICTL)上,并正在增加军民伙伴关系的数量,其中小型军事治疗小组在平民创伤中心全职工作。然而,缺乏验证这种方法的数据。我们假设在民用一级创伤中心全职工作的军事角色1从业者将获得与部署到活跃战区的提供者相似的复苏特定程序频率,并使用急诊医学(EM) ICTL来比较民用一级创伤中心的创伤患者队列和国防部创伤登记处(DODTR)的战斗伤亡队列之间的程序频率选择。方法:采用描述性统计方法,将2016年1月1日至2017年12月31日期间在一级创伤中心急诊科(ED)就诊并直接被送往手术室、重症监护病房或停尸房的重症受伤军人年龄(18-35岁)创伤患者与2007年1月至2016年8月期间在伊拉克和阿富汗急诊科就诊的国防部创伤登记处(DODTR)患者进行比较。主要结局是进行ICTL手术的频率,次要结局是损伤严重程度。结果:我们确定了843名平民患者符合纳入标准,1719名军人年龄患者在研究期间被创伤登记处捕获。从DODTR中选择的队列包括27,359例患者。两组的人口统计数据相似,除了DODTR队列包括更多的爆炸创伤患者(55%对0.4%)。我们发现类似的ICTL手术频率(在平民队列中每1.84例患者进行1次手术,而在军人队列中每1.52例患者进行1次手术)。结论:一级创伤中心的平民病人和战斗伤病员之间进行一级ICTL创伤手术的频率相似。通过适当的实践实施,角色1从业者有机会在平民创伤中心保持他们的创伤复苏技能。
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