Center for Policy and Research in Emergency Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.
JAMA Surg. 2019 Sep 1;154(9):e192279. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2019.2279. Epub 2019 Sep 18.
Trauma registries are the primary data mechanism in trauma systems to evaluate and improve the care of injured patients. Research has suggested that trauma registries may miss high-risk older adults, who commonly experience morbidity and mortality after injury.
To compare injured older adults who were included in with those excluded from trauma registries, with a focus on patients with serious injuries, requiring major surgery, or dying after injury.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study included all injured adults 65 years and older transported by 44 emergency medical services agencies to 51 trauma and nontrauma centers in 7 counties in Oregon and Washington from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011, with follow-up through December 31, 2012. Record linkage was used to match emergency medical services records with state trauma registries, state discharge databases, state death registries, and Medicare claims. Data were analyzed from August to November 2018.
Inclusion in vs exclusion from a trauma registry.
Mortality up to 12 months, including time to death and causes of death.
Of 8161 included patients, 5579 (68.4%) were women, and the mean (SE) age was 82.2 (0.10) years. A total of 1720 older adults (21.1%) were matched to a trauma registry record. Seriously injured patients not captured by trauma registries ranged from 18% (7 of 38 patients with abdominal-pelvic Abbreviated Injury Scale score of 3 or greater) to 80.0% (1792 of 2241 patients with extremity Abbreviated Injury Scale score of 3 or greater), while 68 of 186 patients requiring major nonorthopedic surgery (36.6%) and 1809 of 2325 patients requiring orthopedic surgery (77.8%) were not included in trauma registries. Of patients with serious injuries or undergoing major surgery missed by trauma registries (range by injury and procedure type, 36.0% to 57.1%), 36.4% (39.3% when excluding serious extremity injuries and orthopedic procedures) were treated at trauma centers, particularly level III through V hospitals. When registry and nonregistry groups were tracked over 12 months, 93 of 188 in-hospital deaths (49.5%) and 1531 of 1887 total deaths (81.1%) occurred in the nonregistry cohort.
In their current form, trauma registries are ineffective in capturing, tracking, and evaluating injured older adults, although mortality following injury is frequently due to noninjury causes. High-risk injured older adults are not included in registries because of care in nontrauma hospitals, restrictive registry inclusion criteria, and being missed by registries in trauma centers.
创伤登记处是创伤系统中评估和改善受伤患者护理的主要数据机制。研究表明,创伤登记处可能会遗漏高风险的老年患者,这些患者在受伤后通常会出现发病率和死亡率。
比较纳入和排除创伤登记处的老年受伤患者,重点是严重受伤、需要大手术或受伤后死亡的患者。
设计、地点和参与者:这项队列研究纳入了 2011 年 1 月 1 日至 2011 年 12 月 31 日期间,由俄勒冈州和华盛顿州的 7 个县的 44 个紧急医疗服务机构送往 51 个创伤和非创伤中心的所有 65 岁及以上的受伤成年人,随访至 2012 年 12 月 31 日。使用记录链接将紧急医疗服务记录与州创伤登记处、州出院数据库、州死亡登记处和医疗保险索赔进行匹配。数据分析于 2018 年 8 月至 11 月进行。
纳入与排除创伤登记处。
12 个月内的死亡率,包括死亡时间和死亡原因。
在 8161 名纳入患者中,5579 名(68.4%)为女性,平均(SE)年龄为 82.2(0.10)岁。共有 1720 名老年患者(21.1%)与创伤登记处的记录相匹配。未被创伤登记处捕获的严重受伤患者范围从 18%(38 名腹部骨盆损伤严重程度评分(Abbreviated Injury Scale)为 3 或更高的患者中有 7 名)到 80.0%(2241 名四肢损伤严重程度评分(Abbreviated Injury Scale)为 3 或更高的患者中有 1792 名),而 186 名需要大非骨科手术的患者中有 68 名(36.6%)和 2325 名需要骨科手术的患者中有 1809 名(77.8%)未被纳入创伤登记处。在被创伤登记处遗漏的严重受伤或接受大手术的患者中(按损伤和手术类型的范围,36.0%至 57.1%),36.4%(排除严重四肢损伤和骨科手术时为 39.3%)在创伤中心接受治疗,特别是三级至五级医院。在对登记组和非登记组进行 12 个月的跟踪后,188 名住院死亡患者中有 93 名(49.5%)和 1887 名总死亡患者中有 1531 名(81.1%)发生在非登记组。
目前,创伤登记处无法有效地捕获、跟踪和评估受伤的老年患者,尽管受伤后的死亡率通常是由非损伤原因造成的。高危受伤的老年患者未被纳入登记处,原因是在非创伤医院接受治疗、登记处纳入标准受限以及在创伤中心被登记处遗漏。