Egol Kenneth A, Tolisano Anthony M, Spratt Kevin F, Koval Kenneth J
Department of Orthopaedics, The NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, NY, New York, USA.
J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2011 Apr;4(2):178-83. doi: 10.4103/0974-2700.82202.
Although most medical centers are equipped for 24-h care, some "middle of the night" services may not be as robust as they are during daylight hours. This would have potential impact upon certain outcome measurements in trauma patients. The purpose of this paper was to assess the effect of patient arrival time at hospital emergency departments on in-hospital survival following trauma.
Data of patients, 18 years of age or older, with no evidence that they were transferred to or from that center were obtained from the National Trauma Data Bank Version 7.0. Patients meeting the above criteria were excluded if there was no valid mortality status, arrival time information, injury severity score, or trauma center designation. The primary analyses investigated the association of arrival time and trauma center level on mortality. Relative risks of mortality versus patient arrival time and trauma level were determined after controlling for age, gender, race, comorbidities, injury, region of the country, and year of admission.
In total, 601,388 or 71.7% of the 838,284 eligible patients were retained. The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 4.7%. The 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. time period had a significantly higher adjusted relative risk for in-hospital mortality than the 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. time frame (ARR=1.18, P<;0.0001). This pattern held across trauma center levels, but was the weakest at Level I and the strongest at Level III/IV centers (Level I: ARR=1.10, Level II: ARR=1.14, and combined Level III/IV: ARR=1.32, all P<0.0001).
Hospital arrival between midnight and 6 a.m. was associated with a higher mortality rate than other times of the day. This relationship held true across all trauma center levels. This information may warrant a redistribution of hospital resources across all time periods of the day.
尽管大多数医疗中心都具备24小时护理的条件,但一些“午夜”服务可能不如白天时段那样完善。这可能会对创伤患者的某些预后指标产生潜在影响。本文旨在评估患者到达医院急诊科的时间对创伤后院内生存率的影响。
从国家创伤数据库第7.0版中获取年龄在18岁及以上、无证据表明其转入或转出该中心的患者数据。如果没有有效的死亡状态、到达时间信息、损伤严重程度评分或创伤中心指定信息,则排除符合上述标准的患者。主要分析研究了到达时间和创伤中心级别与死亡率之间的关联。在控制了年龄、性别、种族、合并症、损伤、国家地区和入院年份后,确定了死亡率与患者到达时间和创伤级别之间的相对风险。
总共保留了838,284名符合条件患者中的601,388名(71.7%)。总体院内死亡率为4.7%。下午6点至上午6点时间段的院内死亡率调整相对风险显著高于上午6点至下午6点时间段(调整后相对风险=1.18,P<0.0001)。这种模式在各创伤中心级别中均存在,但在一级创伤中心最弱,在三级/四级创伤中心最强(一级:调整后相对风险=1.10,二级:调整后相对风险=1.14,三级/四级合并:调整后相对风险=1.32,均P<0.0001)。
午夜至上午6点到达医院与一天中其他时间相比死亡率更高。这种关系在所有创伤中心级别中均成立。这些信息可能需要对医院资源在一天的所有时间段进行重新分配。