Gurria Juan P, Haas Lynn, Troutt Misty, Moody Suzanne, Hossain Md Monir, Bhuiyan Mohammad Alfrad Nobel, Falcone Richard A
From the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (J.P.G., L.H., M.T., S.M., M.M.H., M.A.N.B., R.A.F.J), Cincinnati, Ohio.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2017 Jun;82(6):1007-1013. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000001439.
Appropriate and timely triage is an essential component of a trauma system. In the state of Ohio, there are 6 verified pediatric trauma centers (PTCs) across 8 state regions. The purpose of this study was to better understand the pediatric undertriage rates in the state.
We used the Ohio Trauma Registry from 2007 to 2012, consisting of 14,045 records of children younger than 16 years admitted to a hospital for more than 48 hours or who sustained a traumatic death. Pediatric undertriage was defined as not being directly transported to a PTC when one was available within 30 minutes or not being transferred to a PTC within 2 hours of injury.
The state pediatric undertriage rate was 52%, only decreasing to 35% when up to a 4-hour transfer time was allowed. Across state trauma regions, undertriage rates varied from 94% to 40%. More than 28% of injured children had access to a PTC within 30 minutes of their home. A trauma center (adult or pediatric) was within 30 minutes for 66% of the children, yet 32% of the children went to a nontrauma center first. Overall, 29% of children never made it to a PTC, and 4% of children remained at a nontrauma center, with regional variation from 5% to 0.5%. Statewide mortality was nearly 3%, with regional variations between 5% and 0.4%. Mortality rate within the appropriately triaged group was 5.3%, while mortality rate in the undertriage group was only 0.7%. Overall, 53% of transferred patients had a more than 2-hour transfer time.
Despite the significant number of PTCs in Ohio, there remains a high undertriage rate with significant regional variations and long transfer times. Continued analysis will be useful in furthering trauma system development for the injured child.
Therapeutic/care management study, level IV; epidemiological, level IV.
恰当且及时的分诊是创伤系统的重要组成部分。在俄亥俄州,8个州区域分布着6家经认证的儿科创伤中心(PTC)。本研究的目的是更深入了解该州儿科分诊不足的发生率。
我们使用了2007年至2012年的俄亥俄创伤登记数据,其中包含14045条16岁以下儿童的记录,这些儿童因伤住院超过48小时或因创伤死亡。儿科分诊不足的定义为:在30分钟内有可用的PTC时未直接转运至该中心,或受伤后2小时内未转至PTC。
该州儿科分诊不足发生率为52%,若允许最长4小时的转运时间,该发生率仅降至35%。在全州各创伤区域,分诊不足发生率从94%至40%不等。超过28%的受伤儿童在离家30分钟内可到达PTC。66%的儿童在30分钟内可到达创伤中心(成人或儿科),但仍有32%的儿童首先前往了非创伤中心。总体而言,29%的儿童从未到达PTC,4%的儿童留在非创伤中心,区域差异在5%至0.5%之间。全州死亡率近3%,区域差异在5%至0.4%之间。恰当分诊组的死亡率为5.3%,而分诊不足组的死亡率仅为0.7%。总体而言,53%的转运患者转运时间超过2小时。
尽管俄亥俄州有大量的PTC,但分诊不足发生率仍然很高,存在显著的区域差异和较长的转运时间。持续分析将有助于进一步完善针对受伤儿童的创伤系统发展。
治疗/护理管理研究,IV级;流行病学,IV级。