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恐怖主义恐惧对医院急诊科使用和心血管事件发生率的早期影响:一项土耳其多中心研究。

Early effect of the fear of terrorism on a hospital's emergency department use and on the incidence of cardiovascular events: A Turkish multicenter study.

机构信息

Internal Medicine Department, Bakirkoy Dr. Sadi Konuk Training and Research Hospital, Saglik Bilimleri University, Istanbul, Turkey.

Department of Biostatistics, Marmara University Medical Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey.

出版信息

Int J Health Plann Manage. 2019 Apr;34(2):872-879. doi: 10.1002/hpm.2756. Epub 2019 Feb 6.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

To our knowledge, the early effect of the fear caused by terrorism on human health, especially its effect on the number of visits to medical emergency departments (EDs), has not yet been studied.

OBJECTIVES

To observe the effect of fear from terrorist alerts on the use of EDs and on the rate of cardiovascular (CV) and/or cerebrovascular events.

SETTING

In Istanbul, Turkey, there was a terror alert on the weekend of 19 and 20 March 2016. In this multicenter retrospective study, we compared the data of patients from that weekend with those from the preceding and following weekends.

PATIENTS

A total of 12 324 adult patients' records were included in this study: 4562 patients in the first weekend, 3627 patients in the second, terror alert weekend, and 4135 patients in the third weekend.

MEASUREMENTS

The ED, CV, and cerebrovascular incidence rates of the above three groups were compared.

RESULTS

The rate of ED use was the least in the weekend of the terror alert; the highest rate occurred during the weekend prior to it (female applications decreased more [P = 0.03]). The medical center that was the farthest from the crowded central places of the city and from the place where suicide bombing occurred was less affected by the decrease in use.

CONCLUSIONS

Fear associated with terrorism may affect human health indirectly by preventing patients from reaching the necessary emergency healthcare facilities. This finding may be a pathfinder to decision-makers in such extraordinary emergency conditions. Further studies are needed in this field.

摘要

背景

据我们所知,恐怖主义引发的恐惧对人类健康的早期影响,尤其是对急诊部(ED)就诊人数的影响,尚未得到研究。

目的

观察恐怖警报引起的恐惧对 ED 使用的影响,以及对心血管(CV)和/或脑血管事件的发生率的影响。

设置

在土耳其伊斯坦布尔,2016 年 3 月 19 日和 20 日周末有一个恐怖警报。在这项多中心回顾性研究中,我们比较了那个周末患者的数据与前一个周末和后一个周末的数据。

患者

共有 12324 名成年患者的记录纳入本研究:第一个周末有 4562 名患者,第二个周末,即恐怖警报周末有 3627 名患者,第三个周末有 4135 名患者。

测量

比较了上述三组的 ED、CV 和脑血管发病率。

结果

ED 使用率在恐怖警报周末最低;最高的发生率发生在它之前的周末(女性就诊人数减少更多[P=0.03])。离市中心拥挤的地方和自杀式爆炸发生地点最远的医疗中心受使用率下降的影响较小。

结论

与恐怖主义相关的恐惧可能通过阻止患者获得必要的紧急医疗保健设施,间接地影响人类健康。这一发现可能为决策者在这种特殊紧急情况下提供参考。在这一领域需要进一步研究。

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