1 Department of Emergency Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota USA.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2013 Oct;28(5):466-70. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X13008650. Epub 2013 Jun 27.
According to US military data, airway obstruction is the third leading cause of possibly preventable death in combat. In the absence of law enforcement-specific medical training, military experience has been translated to the law enforcement sector. The purpose of this study was to determine whether airway obstruction represents a significant cause of possibly preventable death in police officers, and whether current military combat lifesaver training programs might have prevented these fatalities.
De-identified, open-source US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Uniform Crime Report Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) data for the years 1998-2007 were reviewed. Cases were included if officers were on duty at the time of fatal injury and died within one hour from time of wounding from penetrating face or neck trauma. After case identification, letters requesting autopsy reports were sent to the departments of victim officers. Reports were abstracted into a Microsoft Excel database.
During the study period, 42 of 533 victim officers met inclusion criteria. Departmental response rate was 85.7%. Autopsy reports were provided for 29 officers; 23 (54.8%) cases remained in the final analysis. All officers died from gunshot wounds. No coroner specifically identified airway obstruction as either a direct cause of death or contributing factor. Based upon autopsy findings, three of 341 officers possibly succumbed to airway trauma (0.9%; 95% CI, 0.0%-1.9%). Endotracheal intubation was the most common advanced airway management technique utilized during attempted resuscitation.
The limited LEOKA data suggests that acute airway obstruction secondary to penetrating trauma appears to be a rare cause of possibly preventable death in police officers. Based upon the nature of airway trauma, nasopharyngeal airways would not be expected to be an effective lifesaving intervention. This study highlights the requirement for a comprehensive mortality and "near miss" database for law enforcement officers.
根据美国军方数据,气道阻塞是战斗中可能可预防的第三大死亡原因。在缺乏执法专业医疗培训的情况下,军方经验已被应用于执法部门。本研究旨在确定气道阻塞是否是警察可能可预防死亡的重要原因,以及当前的军事战斗救生员培训计划是否可能预防这些死亡事件。
审查了 1998 年至 2007 年期间美国联邦调查局(FBI)公开的、非识别的“执法人员伤亡和袭击统一犯罪报告”(LEOKA)数据。如果警察在致命伤害时当班,并在受伤后一小时内因穿透面部或颈部创伤而死亡,则将案例纳入研究。案例确定后,向受害者警察部门发出要求提供尸检报告的信函。报告被摘录到 Microsoft Excel 数据库中。
在研究期间,533 名受害者中有 42 名符合纳入标准。部门响应率为 85.7%。为 29 名警察提供了尸检报告;23 名(54.8%)案例最终被纳入分析。所有警察均死于枪伤。没有验尸官明确将气道阻塞作为直接死因或促成因素。根据尸检结果,341 名警察中可能有 3 人(0.9%;95%CI,0.0%-1.9%)因气道创伤而死亡。在尝试复苏时,最常使用的高级气道管理技术是气管插管。
有限的 LEOKA 数据表明,穿透性创伤引起的急性气道阻塞似乎是警察可能可预防死亡的罕见原因。根据气道创伤的性质,鼻咽气道不太可能成为有效的救生干预措施。本研究强调了为执法人员建立全面的死亡率和“险些丧命”数据库的必要性。