Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA, Torrance, CA; David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA.
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA, Torrance, CA; David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA; Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency, Santa Fe Springs, CA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2017 Aug;70(2):161-168. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2017.01.040. Epub 2017 Feb 28.
Regionalized systems of trauma care and level verification are promulgated by the American College of Surgeons. Whether patient outcomes differ between the 2 highest verifications, Levels I and II, is unknown. In contrast to Level II centers, Level I centers are required to care for a minimum number of severely injured patients, have immediate availability of subspecialty services and equipment, and demonstrate research, substance abuse screening, and injury prevention. We compare risk-adjusted mortality outcomes at Levels I and II centers.
This was an analysis of data from the 2012 to 2014 Los Angeles County Trauma and Emergency Medical Information System. The system includes 14 trauma centers: 5 Level I and 9 Level II centers. Patients meeting criteria for transport to a trauma center are routed to the closest center, regardless of verification level. All adult patients (≥15 years) treated at any of the trauma centers were included. Outcomes of patients treated at Level I versus Level II centers were compared with 2 validated risk-adjusted models: Trauma Score-Injury Severity Score (TRISS) and the Haider model.
Adult subjects (33,890) were treated at a Level I center; 29,724, at a Level II center. We found lower overall mortality at Level II centers compared with Level I, using TRISS (odds ratio 0.68; 95% confidence interval 0.59 to 0.78) and Haider (odds ratio 0.84; 95% confidence interval 0.73 to 0.97).
In this cohort of patients treated at urban and suburban trauma centers, treatment at a Level II trauma center was associated with overall risk-adjusted reduced mortality relative to that at a Level I center. In the subset of penetrating trauma, no differences in mortality were found. Further study is warranted to determine optimal trauma system configuration and allocation of resources.
美国外科医师学院颁布了创伤救治区域化系统和分级验证制度。I 级和 II 级(这两个级别是验证级别中的最高级别)这两个最高验证级别的患者结局是否存在差异尚不清楚。与 II 级中心相比,I 级中心需要收治一定数量的严重受伤患者,能够立即获得专科服务和设备,并开展研究、药物滥用筛查和伤害预防工作。我们比较了 I 级和 II 级中心的风险调整死亡率结果。
这是对 2012 年至 2014 年洛杉矶县创伤和急诊医疗信息系统数据的分析。该系统包括 14 个创伤中心:5 个 I 级和 9 个 II 级中心。符合转运至创伤中心标准的患者被送往最近的中心,无论其验证级别如何。所有在任何创伤中心接受治疗的成年患者(≥15 岁)均被纳入研究。I 级中心与 II 级中心治疗的患者结果通过 2 种经过验证的风险调整模型进行比较:创伤评分-损伤严重程度评分(TRISS)和 Haider 模型。
在 I 级中心治疗的成年患者有 33890 例,在 II 级中心治疗的患者有 29724 例。使用 TRISS(优势比 0.68;95%置信区间 0.59 至 0.78)和 Haider(优势比 0.84;95%置信区间 0.73 至 0.97),我们发现 II 级中心的总体死亡率低于 I 级中心。
在接受城市和郊区创伤中心治疗的患者队列中,与 I 级创伤中心相比,在 II 级创伤中心治疗与整体风险调整后死亡率降低相关。在穿透性创伤亚组中,未发现死亡率差异。需要进一步研究以确定最佳创伤系统配置和资源分配。