推进战斗伤亡护理统计和其他战场护理指标。

Jud C Janak, Russ S Kotwal, Jeffrey T Howard, Jennifer M Gurney, Brian J Eastridge, John B Holcomb, Stacy A Shackelford, Robert A De Lorenzo, Ian J Stewart, Edward L Mazuchowski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

总体统计数据可以提供美国作战行动内部和之间的冲突内和冲突间死亡率比较和趋势。然而,要获取个人层面的数据来评估影响作战伤亡死亡率的医疗和非医疗因素,历来都很困难。在最近的阿富汗和伊拉克冲突中,国防部(DoD)创伤登记处作为联合创伤系统(Joint Trauma System)的一个组成部分得到了发展,该登记处积累的个人层面的数据为各种分析和比较提供了更多的机会。虽然综合统计数据很容易计算,而且在整个国防部都普遍使用,但需要考虑的其他问题包括个别医疗干预措施的影响、非医疗因素、非战斗受伤的伤亡人员以及不完整或缺失的医疗数据,尤其是院前护理和前方外科小组护理方面的数据。我们需要新颖的方法来解决这些问题,以便更清晰地解释综合统计数据,并强调最终能提高生存率和消除战场上可预防死亡的解决方案。尽管许多美军作战死亡人员所受的伤被认为是不可救治的,但如果采用一级和二级预防策略,防止受伤或降低受伤严重程度,这些伤亡人员的存活率可能会提高。本评论建议对传统的战斗伤亡护理综合统计数据进行调整,将联合创伤系统和武装部队法医系统开展的国防部军事创伤死亡率审查过程中的统计数据纳入其中。
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Advancing Combat Casualty Care Statistics and Other Battlefield Care Metrics.

Aggregate statistics can provide intra-conflict and inter-conflict mortality comparisons and trends within and between U.S. combat operations. However, capturing individual-level data to evaluate medical and non-medical factors that influence combat casualty mortality has historically proven difficult. The Department of Defense (DoD) Trauma Registry, developed as an integral component of the Joint Trauma System during recent conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, has amassed individual-level data that have afforded greater opportunity for a variety of analyses and comparisons. Although aggregate statistics are easily calculated and commonly used across the DoD, other issues that require consideration include the impact of individual medical interventions, non-medical factors, non-battle-injured casualties, and incomplete or missing medical data, especially for prehospital care and forward surgical team care. Needed are novel methods to address these issues in order to provide a clearer interpretation of aggregate statistics and to highlight solutions that will ultimately increase survival and eliminate preventable death on the battlefield. Although many U.S. military combat fatalities sustain injuries deemed non-survivable, survival among these casualties might be improved using primary and secondary prevention strategies that prevent injury or reduce injury severity. The current commentary proposes adjustments to traditional aggregate combat casualty care statistics by integrating statistics from the DoD Military Trauma Mortality Review process as conducted by the Joint Trauma System and Armed Forces Medical Examiner System.

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CiteScore
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91
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