Yang Chih-Jen, Tsai Shih-Hung, Chien Wu-Chien, Chung Chi-Hsiang, Dai Niann-Tzyy, Tzeng Yuan-Sheng, Chen Sy-Jou, Wu Ding-Chung, Chen Cheng-Jueng
Department of Emergency Medicine, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center.
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Graduate Institute of Physiology, National Defense Medical Center.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2019 May;98(18):e15457. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000015457.
A mass casualty incident (MCI) can have an enormous impact on an already crowded emergency department (ED), affecting the quality of health care provided to non-MCI ED patients. On June 26, 2015, a burn MCI (BMCI) occurred due to a cornstarch explosion at a party at a water park. The competing needs of the BMCI patients might have crowded out the needs of the non-BMCI patients. Although crowd-out effects have been previously documented in a variety of health care situations, they have not been extensively evaluated during MCIs. We aimed to determine whether the outcomes of the non-MCI patients were compromised during this incident.We conducted a retrospective observational study comparing several health care parameters and outcomes between non-BMCI patients and historical controls during the designated period using institutional electronic records and the National Health Insurance Research Database.On the night of the incident, 53 patients were sent to our ED; most of them arrived within 3 hours after the BMCI. There was a significant increase in the wait time for ICU beds among non-BMCI patients compared to the wait times during the corresponding week of the previous year (8.09 ± 4.21 hours vs 3.77 ± 2.15 hours, P = .008). At the hospital level, there was a significantly increased length of hospital stay (LOS) in the ICU after the MCI compared with the LOS in the ICU in the same week of the preceding year (median days: 15 vs 8, P ≤ .001). At the regional level, there were no significant differences between the 2 periods in the LOS in acute care, LOS in the ICU or mortality rates at the involved medical centers.Crowd-out effects from the MCI occurred in the ED and at the institutional level. Although there was an increased wait time for admission to the ICU and a longer LOS in the ICU, the LOS in acute care beds, treatment of time-sensitive diseases, and mortality rates were not compromised by the current MCI protocol at either the institutional or regional levels.
大规模伤亡事件(MCI)会对本就拥挤的急诊科(ED)产生巨大影响,进而影响为非MCI急诊患者提供的医疗服务质量。2015年6月26日,一家水上乐园举办派对时发生玉米淀粉爆炸,引发了一起烧伤大规模伤亡事件(BMCI)。BMCI患者的各种需求可能排挤了非BMCI患者的需求。尽管此前在各种医疗场景中都记录过排挤效应,但在大规模伤亡事件期间尚未对其进行广泛评估。我们旨在确定在该事件中,非MCI患者的治疗结果是否受到了影响。我们进行了一项回顾性观察研究,利用机构电子记录和国民健康保险研究数据库,比较指定时间段内非BMCI患者与历史对照之间的多个医疗参数和治疗结果。事件发生当晚,53名患者被送往我们的急诊科;他们中的大多数在BMCI发生后3小时内到达。与上一年相应周的等待时间相比,非BMCI患者入住重症监护病房(ICU)的等待时间显著增加(8.09±4.21小时对3.77±2.15小时,P = 0.008)。在医院层面,与上一年同一周ICU的住院时间相比,MCI发生后ICU的住院时间显著延长(中位数天数:15天对8天,P≤0.001)。在区域层面,两个时期在急性护理住院时间、ICU住院时间或相关医疗中心的死亡率方面没有显著差异。MCI的排挤效应发生在急诊科和机构层面。尽管入住ICU的等待时间增加且ICU住院时间延长,但急性护理床位的住院时间、对时间敏感疾病的治疗以及死亡率在机构或区域层面均未受到当前MCI方案的影响。