Peery Charles Andrew, Brice Jane, White William D
Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Prehosp Emerg Care. 2007 Jul-Sep;11(3):293-7. doi: 10.1080/10903120701348172.
Prehospital spinal immobilization (PSI) for patients with suspected spinal injury has been the universal standard of practice for emergency medical services (EMS) in the United States since the early 1970s. PSI research has faced numerous methodological difficulties, including an inability to evaluate whether the immobilizations being studied were carried out appropriately. The purpose of this study was to assess the quality of spinal immobilization to a long spine board in patients presenting via EMS to an emergency department (ED).
All noncritically ill patients presenting to a tertiary care academic trauma center who had been immobilized on a long spine board for EMS transport were approached for enrollment. Each subject was evaluated for the number and location of restraining straps and their degree of tightness.
Of 50 consenting subjects, 15 (30%) had at least one unattached strap or piece of tape that should have attached their head to the board. Of 50 subjects, 44 (88%) were found to have greater than 2 cm of slack between their body and at least one strap. Among those with any straps looser than 2 cm, the average number of loose straps was 3.4.
This study suggests that many patients are not well immobilized on arrival at the Emergency department.
自20世纪70年代初以来,对疑似脊柱损伤患者进行院前脊柱固定(PSI)一直是美国紧急医疗服务(EMS)的普遍标准做法。PSI研究面临众多方法学难题,包括无法评估所研究的固定操作是否恰当实施。本研究的目的是评估通过EMS送至急诊科(ED)的患者在长脊柱板上的脊柱固定质量。
纳入所有通过EMS转运并已固定在长脊柱板上送至三级医疗学术创伤中心的非危重症患者。对每个受试者的约束带数量和位置及其松紧程度进行评估。
在50名同意参与的受试者中,15名(30%)至少有一条应将其头部固定在板上的未系紧的带子或胶带。在50名受试者中,44名(88%)被发现身体与至少一条带子之间的松弛度大于2厘米。在那些有任何一条带子松弛超过2厘米的受试者中,松弛带子的平均数量为3.4条。
本研究表明,许多患者在到达急诊科时未得到良好固定。