Aluisio Adam R, Umuhire Olivier Félix, Mbanjumucyo Gabin, George Naomi, Kearney Alexis, Karim Naz, Nyinawankusi Jeanne DʼArc, Uwitonze Eric, Enumah Sam, Scott John W, Mutabazi Zeta, Ntakiyiruta Georges, Jayaraman Sudha, Riviello Robert, Byiringiro Jean Claude, Levine Adam C
From the Department of Emergency Medicine, Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI.
Department of Anesthesia Emergency Medicine and Critical Care, University of Rwanda.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 2019 Sep;35(9):630-636. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000001045.
Pediatric trauma is a significant public health problem in resource-constrained settings; however, the epidemiology of injuries is poorly defined in Rwanda. This study describes the characteristics of pediatric trauma patients transported to the emergency department (ED) of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Kigali by emergency medical services in Kigali, Rwanda.
This cohort study was conducted at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Kigali from December 2012 to February 2015. Patients 15 years or younger brought by emergency medical services for injuries to the ED were included. Prehospital and hospital-based data on demographics, injury characteristics, treatments, and outcomes were gathered.
Data from 119 prehospital patients were accrued, with corresponding hospital data for 64 cases. The median age was 9.5 years, with most patients being male (67.2%). Injured children were most frequently brought from a street setting (69.6%). Road traffic injuries accounted for 69.4% of all mechanisms, with more than two thirds due to pedestrians being struck. Extremity trauma was the most common region of injury (53.1%), followed by craniofacial (46.8%). The most frequent ED interventions were analgesia (66.1%) and intravenous fluids (43.6%). Half of the 16 obtained head computed tomography scans demonstrated acute pathology. Twenty-eight patients (51.9%) were admitted, with 57.1% requiring surgery and having a median in-hospital care duration of 9 days (range, 1-122 days).
In this cohort of Rwandan pediatric trauma patients, injuries to the extremities and craniofacial regions were most common. Theses traumatic patterns were predominantly due to road traffic injury, suggesting that interventions addressing the prevention of this mechanism, and treatment of the associated injury patterns, may be beneficial in the Rwandan setting.
在资源有限的环境中,儿童创伤是一个重大的公共卫生问题;然而,卢旺达的伤害流行病学情况尚不明确。本研究描述了卢旺达基加利市通过紧急医疗服务转运至基加利大学中心医院急诊科的儿童创伤患者的特征。
本队列研究于2012年12月至2015年2月在基加利大学中心医院进行。纳入由紧急医疗服务转运至急诊科的15岁及以下因伤就诊的患者。收集了院前和院内关于人口统计学、损伤特征、治疗及结局的数据。
共收集了119例院前患者的数据,其中64例有相应的院内数据。中位年龄为9.5岁,大多数患者为男性(67.2%)。受伤儿童最常从街道环境送来(69.6%)。道路交通伤占所有致伤机制的69.4%,其中超过三分之二是行人被撞。四肢创伤是最常见的损伤部位(53.1%),其次是颅面部(46.8%)。急诊科最常见的干预措施是镇痛(66.1%)和静脉输液(43.6%)。16例头颅计算机断层扫描中有一半显示有急性病变。28例患者(51.9%)入院,其中57.1%需要手术,中位住院时间为9天(范围1 - 122天)。
在这组卢旺达儿童创伤患者中,四肢和颅面部损伤最为常见。这些创伤模式主要是由于道路交通伤所致,这表明在卢旺达背景下,针对预防这种致伤机制及治疗相关损伤模式的干预措施可能有益。