Cox Andrew T, Lentaigne J, White S, Burns D S, Parsons I, O'Shea M, Stacey M, Sharma S, Wilson D
Department of Military Medicine, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK St George's University of London, London, UK.
Department of Military Medicine, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK.
J R Army Med Corps. 2016 Feb;162(1):56-62. doi: 10.1136/jramc-2014-000385. Epub 2015 Jun 3.
Detailed knowledge of the likely volume and nature of the diseases presenting to deployed secondary care facilities aids operational planning. Now the British operation in Afghanistan has ended and a record of the experience is useful to preserve the lessons learned.
Over a 2-year period from April 2011, prospective demographic and clinical data were collected on consecutive general internal medicine admissions to the Role 3 Hospital in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan. Up to four different symptoms and diagnoses were coded using the WHO International Classification of Disease, V.10 for each patient.
A total of 1368 medical patients were admitted. Of 1131 military admissions, 612 were from the UK (54.1%) and the remainder from 13 allied countries; 237 civilians came from 23 countries. Civilians were older than the military patients (p<0.001) but included five children. The 20 most frequent presenting symptoms were identified and there were 1626 diagnoses made. The 10 most frequent diagnoses were infectious gastroenteritis (12.6%), heat illness (4.3%), pneumonia (3.6%), epilepsy (2.6%), cellulitis (2.7%), migraine (1.8%), peptic ulcer disease (1.2%), myocardial infarction (1.2%), venous thromboembolism (1.2%) and pericarditis (0.7%). In 252 cases (18.4%) a firm diagnosis was not reached and a symptom was recorded. The five most frequent of these were undifferentiated febrile illnesses (4.6%), syncope (3.7%), chest pain (2.8%), headache (0.8%) and palpitations (0.7%). The mean hospital length of stay was 1.59 days and 72.2% of UK military patients were 'returned to unit'. Three civilian patients died in hospital or following aeromedical evacuation and there were no deaths of any military patients.
This study demonstrates the wide variety of presentations seen by physicians at an established military field hospital. This information informs the core syllabus of military physician training and will help facilitate planning for future medical support to similar military operations.
RCDM/Res/Audit/1036/12/0305.
了解部署的二级医疗设施中可能出现的疾病数量和性质的详细信息有助于作战规划。如今英国在阿富汗的行动已经结束,记录这段经历有助于吸取经验教训。
从2011年4月开始的两年时间里,对阿富汗巴斯蒂安营地3号医院连续收治的普通内科患者的人口统计学和临床数据进行了前瞻性收集。每位患者最多使用世界卫生组织国际疾病分类第10版编码四种不同的症状和诊断。
共收治了1368名内科患者。在1131名军人患者中,612名来自英国(54.1%),其余来自13个盟国;237名平民来自23个国家。平民患者比军人患者年龄大(p<0.001),但包括5名儿童。确定了20种最常见的症状,并做出了1626项诊断。10种最常见的诊断是感染性肠胃炎(12.6%)、中暑(4.3%)、肺炎(3.6%)、癫痫(2.6%)、蜂窝织炎(2.7%)、偏头痛(1.8%)、消化性溃疡病(1.2%)、心肌梗死(1.2%)、静脉血栓栓塞症(1.2%)和心包炎(0.7%)。在252例(18.4%)病例中未做出明确诊断,仅记录了症状。其中最常见的五种症状是不明原因发热性疾病(4.6%)、晕厥(3.7%)、胸痛(2.8%)、头痛(0.8%)和心悸(0.7%)。平均住院时间为1.59天,72.2%的英国军人患者“返回部队”。三名平民患者在医院死亡或在航空医疗后送途中死亡,没有军人患者死亡。
本研究表明,在一家成熟的军事野战医院,医生会遇到各种各样的病症。这些信息为军事医生培训的核心大纲提供了参考,并将有助于为未来类似军事行动的医疗支持进行规划。
RCDM/Res/Audit/1036/12/0305。