Trauma Care Foundation Iraq, Suleimaniah, Iraq.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2012 Feb;27(1):36-41. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X11006819.
In low-resource communities with long prehospital transport times, most trauma deaths occur outside the hospital. Previous studies from Iraq demonstrate that a two-tier network of rural paramedics with village-based first helpers reduces mortality in land mine and war-injured from 40% to 10%. However, these studies of prehospital trauma care in low-income countries have been conducted with historical controls, thus the results may be unreliable due to differences in study contexts. The aim of this study was to use a controlled study design to examine the effect of a two-tier prehospital rural trauma system on road traffic accident trauma mortality.
A single referral surgical hospital was the endpoint in a single-blinded, non-randomized cohort study. The catchment areas consisted of some districts with no formal Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system, and other districts where 95 health center paramedics had been trained and equipped to provide advanced life support, and 5,000 laypersons had been trained to give on-site first aid. The hospital staff registered trauma mortality and on-admission physiological severity blindly. Assuming that prehospital care would have no significant impact on mortality in moderate injuries, only road traffic accident (RTA) casualties with an Injury Severity Score (ISS)≥9 were selected for study.
During a three-month study period, 205 patients were selected for study (128 in the treatment group and 77 in the control group). The mean prehospital transit time was approximately two hours. The two groups were comparable with regards to demographic characteristics, distribution of wounds and injuries, and mean anatomical severity. The mortality rate was eight percent in the treatment group, compared to 44% in the control group (95% CI, 25%-48%). Adjusted for severity differences between the treatment and control groups, prehospital care was a significant contributor to survival.
Where prehospital transport time is long, a two-tier prehospital system of trained paramedics and layperson first responders reduces trauma mortality in severe RTA injuries. The findings may be valid for civilian Emergency Medical Services interventions in other low-resource countries.
在院前交通时间较长的资源匮乏社区,大多数创伤死亡发生在医院之外。来自伊拉克的先前研究表明,农村护理人员的两层网络与基于村庄的急救人员相结合,可以将地雷和战争受伤者的死亡率从 40%降低至 10%。然而,这些在低收入国家进行的院前创伤护理研究都是使用历史对照进行的,因此由于研究背景的差异,结果可能不可靠。本研究旨在使用对照研究设计来检验两层农村院前创伤系统对道路交通伤害创伤死亡率的影响。
一家单一转诊外科医院是单盲、非随机队列研究的终点。这些集水区包括一些没有正式急救医疗服务(EMS)系统的地区,以及其他地区,在这些地区,已经培训和配备了 95 名卫生中心护理人员以提供高级生命支持,并且已经培训了 5000 名平民以提供现场急救。医院工作人员盲目登记创伤死亡率和入院时的生理严重程度。假设院前护理不会对中度损伤的死亡率产生重大影响,仅选择创伤严重程度评分(ISS)≥9 的道路交通伤害(RTA)伤亡人员进行研究。
在三个月的研究期间,选择了 205 名患者进行研究(治疗组 128 名,对照组 77 名)。平均院前转运时间约为两小时。两组在人口统计学特征、伤口和损伤分布以及平均解剖严重程度方面具有可比性。治疗组的死亡率为 8%,而对照组为 44%(95%CI,25%-48%)。调整治疗组和对照组之间的严重程度差异后,院前护理是生存的重要因素。
在院前转运时间较长的情况下,受过培训的护理人员和非专业急救人员的两层院前系统可降低严重 RTA 损伤的创伤死亡率。这些发现可能对其他资源匮乏国家的民用急救医疗服务干预措施有效。