新西兰道路交通创伤后院外护理和转运途径中的农村和种族差异。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.5811/westjem.18366
Rebbecca Lilley, Gabrielle Davie, Bridget Dicker, Papaarangi Reid, Shanthi Ameratunga, Charles Branas, Nicola Campbell, Ian Civil, Bridget Kool
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介院外急救医疗服务(EMS)的护理响应和送往医院的途径对患者受伤后的存活率起着至关重要的作用,也是功能完善、优化的创伤护理系统的首要组成部分。尽管奥特亚罗瓦-新西兰(Aotearoa-New Zealand,简称新西兰)的医疗系统在提供公平的医疗保健服务方面面临着长期挑战,但人们对急救医疗服务中的不公平现象以及通往医院的转运途径却知之甚少:这项基于全国急救数据的院外护理人群队列研究包括创伤患者:在两年的时间里,共有 746 名符合条件的患者,其中 692 人被送往医院。在接受急救服务的车辆乘员中,原住民毛利人占28%(196人),而47%(324人)的患者受伤发生在农村地区。与城市患者相比,农村患者的急救医疗运送路径中,到达第一家医院的时间较慢(最慢三分位数的总时间为44%对7%,P≥0.001),到达最终医疗机构的时间较长(直接运送,77%对87%,P=0.001)。与农村非毛利人相比,在农村地区受伤的毛利人被分流到优先转运路径的几率较低(最快调度分流率分别为92%和97%,P = 0.05);到达第一家医院的时间较慢(时间最慢的三分位数总计为55%和41%,P = 0.02);获得专科创伤治疗的机会较少(到达三级创伤医院的几率为51%和73%,P = 0.02):结论:在新西兰,由急救医疗服务(EMS)接诊和转运的 RTC 患者中,院外急救医疗服务(EMS)转运至专科创伤医疗机构的路径存在差异,这与事发地点和种族有很大关系。这些发现反映了毛利人在健康方面存在的其他差异,为临床和政策决策者提供了以公平为重点的证据基础,以指导他们优化急救护理服务,减少与院外急救护理相关的差异。
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Rural and Ethnic Disparities in Out-of-hospital Care and Transport Pathways After Road Traffic Trauma in New Zealand.

Introduction: The out-of-hospital emergency medical service (EMS) care responses and the transport pathways to hospital play a vital role in patient survival following injury and are the first component of a well-functioning, optimised system of trauma care. Despite longstanding challenges in delivering equitable healthcare services in the health system of Aotearoa-New Zealand (NZ), little is known about inequities in EMS-delivered care and transport pathways to hospital-level care.

Methods: This population-level cohort study on out-of-hospital care, based on national EMS data, included trauma patients <85 years in age who were injured in a road traffic crash (RTC). In this study we examined the combined relationship between ethnicity and geographical location of injury in EMS out-of-hospital care and transport pathways following RTCs in Aotearoa-NZ. Analyses were stratified by geographical location of injury (rural and urban) and combined ethnicity-geographical location (rural Māori, rural non-Māori, urban Māori, and urban non-Māori).

Results: In a two-year period, there were 746 eligible patients; of these, 692 were transported to hospital. Indigenous Māori comprised 28% (196) of vehicle occupants attended by EMS, while 47% (324) of patients' injuries occurred in a rural location. The EMS transport pathways to hospital for rural patients were slower to reach first hospital (total in slowest tertile of time 44% vs 7%, P ≥ 0.001) and longer to reach definitive care (direct transport, 77% vs 87%, P = 0.001) compared to urban patients. Māori patients injured in a rural location were comparatively less likely than rural non-Māori to be triaged to priority transport pathways (fastest dispatch triage, 92% vs 97%, respectively, P = 0.05); slower to reach first hospital (total in slowest tertile of time, 55% vs 41%, P = 0.02); and had less access to specialist trauma care (reached tertiary trauma hospital, 51% vs 73%, P = 0.02).

Conclusion: Among RTC patients attended and transported by EMS in NZ, there was variability in out-of-hospital EMS transport pathways through to specialist trauma care, strongly patterned by location of incident and ethnicity. These findings, mirroring other health disparities for Māori, provide an equity-focused evidence base to guide clinical and policy decision makers to optimize the delivery of EMS care and reduce disparities associated with out-of-hospital EMS care.

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来源期刊
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
Western Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.20%
发文量
125
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: WestJEM focuses on how the systems and delivery of emergency care affects health, health disparities, and health outcomes in communities and populations worldwide, including the impact of social conditions on the composition of patients seeking care in emergency departments.
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