Department of Surgery, Tripler Army Medical Center, TAMC, HI.
Department of Clinical Investigation, Tripler Army Medical Center, TAMC, HI.
J Am Coll Surg. 2014 May;218(5):1018-23. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2013.12.050. Epub 2014 Feb 12.
The purpose of this study was to define the scope of combat- and noncombat-related inpatient pediatric humanitarian care provided from 2002 to 2012 by the United States (US) Military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
A review of the Patient Administration Systems and Biostatistics Activity (PASBA) database for all admissions from 2002 to 2012 by US military hospitals in Afghanistan and Iraq for children 14 years of age and younger provided data to analyze the use of medical care. North Atlantic Treaty Organization Standardization Agreement (STANAG) injury codes provided injury cause and the ICD-codes provided diagnosis. In-hospital mortality, blood usage, number of invasive procedures, and hospital stay were analyzed by country and injury category.
There were 6,273 admissions that met inclusion criteria. In Afghanistan, there were more than twice as many pediatric noncombat-related admissions (2,197) as pediatric combat-related admissions (1,095). In Iraq, the difference was minimal (1,391 noncombat vs 1,590 combat). The most common cause of noncombat-related admission in both countries was injury: primarily motor vehicle related and burns, which varied significantly by age. Older patients (older than 8 years in Afghanistan and older than 4 years in Iraq) were more likely combat victims. Mortality was highest for combat trauma in Iraq (11%) and noncombat trauma in Afghanistan (8%). The in-hospital mortality in both countries was 5% for admissions unrelated to trauma. Resource use was highest for combat trauma in both countries.
Noncombat-related medical care was the primary reason for pediatric humanitarian admissions to United States military combat hospitals in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2002 to 2012. Combat-related injuries have a higher mortality than noncombat injuries or other admissions.
本研究旨在界定 2002 年至 2012 年期间,美国(US)军方在伊拉克和阿富汗提供的战斗相关和非战斗相关住院儿科人道主义医疗的范围。
对 2002 年至 2012 年期间,驻阿富汗和伊拉克的美国军事医院所有 14 岁及以下儿童入院的患者管理系统和生物统计学活动(PASBA)数据库进行了审查,提供了分析医疗服务使用情况的数据。北大西洋公约组织标准化协议(STANAG)伤害代码提供了伤害原因,ICD 代码提供了诊断。根据国家和伤害类别分析了院内死亡率、血液使用量、侵入性程序数量和住院时间。
共有 6273 例符合纳入标准的入院病例。在阿富汗,儿科非战斗相关入院(2197 例)是儿科战斗相关入院(1095 例)的两倍多。在伊拉克,差异很小(非战斗 1391 例,战斗 1590 例)。两国非战斗相关入院的最常见原因是受伤:主要与机动车相关和烧伤,且因年龄而异。年龄较大的患者(在阿富汗年龄大于 8 岁,在伊拉克年龄大于 4 岁)更有可能成为战斗受害者。伊拉克战斗创伤死亡率最高(11%),阿富汗非战斗创伤死亡率最高(8%)。两国非创伤性入院的院内死亡率均为 5%。两国资源使用最多的都是战斗创伤。
2002 年至 2012 年期间,非战斗相关医疗是驻伊拉克和阿富汗的美国军事战斗医院儿科人道主义入院的主要原因。战斗相关伤害的死亡率高于非战斗相关伤害或其他入院。