Center for Policy and Research in Emergency Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR.
Acad Emerg Med. 2013 Sep;20(9):911-9. doi: 10.1111/acem.12213.
Reasons for undertriage (transporting seriously injured patients to nontrauma centers) and the apparent lack of benefit of trauma centers among older adults remain unclear; understanding emergency medical services (EMS) provider reasons for selecting certain hospitals in trauma systems may provide insight to these issues. In this study, the authors evaluated reasons cited by EMS providers for selecting specific hospital destinations for injured patients, stratified by age, injury severity, field triage status, and prognosis.
This was a retrospective cohort study of injured children and adults transported by 61 EMS agencies to 93 hospitals (trauma and nontrauma centers) in five regions of the western United States from 2006 through 2008. Hospital records were probabilistically linked to EMS records using trauma registries, state discharge data, and emergency department data. The seven standardized reasons cited by EMS providers for selecting hospital destinations included closest facility, ambulance diversion, physician choice, law enforcement choice, patient or family choice, specialty resource center, and other. "Serious injury" was defined as an Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≥ 16, and unadjusted in-hospital mortality was considered as a marker of prognosis. All analyses were stratified by age in 10-year increments, and descriptive statistics were used to characterize the findings.
A total of 176,981 injured patients were evaluated and transported by EMS over the 3-year period, of whom 5,752 (3.3%) had ISS ≥ 16 and 2,773 (1.6%) died. Patient or family choice (50.6%), closest facility (20.7%), and specialty resource center (15.2%) were the most common reasons indicated by EMS providers for selecting destination hospitals; these frequencies varied substantially by patient age. The frequency of patient or family choice increased with increasing age, from 36.4% among 21- to 30-year-olds to 75.8% among those older than 90 years. This trend paralleled undertriage rates and persisted when restricted to patients with serious injuries. Older patients with the worst prognoses were preferentially transported to major trauma centers, a finding that was not explained by field triage protocols.
Emergency medical services transport patterns among injured patients are not random, even after accounting for field triage protocols. The selection of hospitals appears to be heavily influenced by patient or family choice, which increases with patient age and involves inherent differences in patient prognosis.
对于(将重伤患者送往非创伤中心)进行分诊不足的原因以及创伤中心对老年人似乎没有益处的问题仍不清楚;了解紧急医疗服务(EMS)提供者在创伤系统中选择某些医院的原因可能会对此问题有所了解。在这项研究中,作者评估了 EMS 提供者选择特定医院治疗受伤患者的原因,这些原因按年龄,伤害严重程度,现场分诊状态和预后进行分层。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,涉及 2006 年至 2008 年期间,美国西部五个地区的 61 个 EMS 机构将 176981 名受伤儿童和成人送往 93 家医院(创伤和非创伤中心),其中包括 7 个标准化的 EMS 提供者选择医院目的地的原因,包括最近的医疗机构,救护车转移,医师选择,执法机构选择,患者或家属选择,专科资源中心和其他原因。“严重受伤”定义为伤害严重程度评分(ISS)≥16,未调整的院内死亡率被认为是预后的标志。所有分析均按年龄每十年增加一次进行分层,使用描述性统计方法对结果进行了描述。
在 3 年期间,共有 176981 名受伤患者通过 EMS 进行了评估和转运,其中有 5752 名(3.3%)ISS≥16,有 2773 名(1.6%)死亡。患者或家属选择(50.6%),最近的医疗机构(20.7%)和专科资源中心(15.2%)是 EMS 提供者选择目的地医院的最常见原因;这些频率因患者年龄而异。患者或家属选择的频率随着年龄的增长而增加,从 21 至 30 岁的 36.4%增加到 90 岁以上的 75.8%。这种趋势与分诊不足的比率平行,并且在仅限于严重受伤的患者时仍然存在。预后最差的老年患者被优先送往主要创伤中心,这一发现不能用现场分诊方案来解释。
即使考虑了现场分诊方案,受伤患者的 EMS 转运模式也并非随机。医院的选择似乎受到患者或家属选择的严重影响,而患者年龄的增加会增加这种选择,并且涉及到患者预后的固有差异。