Saleeby Julie, Myers Justin G, Ekernas Karen, Hunold Katherine, Wangara Ali, Maingi Alice, Wilson Peyton, Mutiso Vincent, Zamamiri Sarah, Bacon Daniel, Davis Wes, Suder John, Agrawal Yash, Ogar Ogar, Martin Ian B K, Dunlop Stephen
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Emergency Medicine, 101 Manning Dr, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
St Joseph Hospital, Department of Emergency Department, 1375 19th Ave, Denver, CO 80218, USA.
Afr J Emerg Med. 2019 Sep;9(3):127-133. doi: 10.1016/j.afjem.2019.05.002. Epub 2019 Jul 2.
Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are continuing to experience a "triple burden" of disease - traumatic injury, non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and communicable disease with maternal and neonatal conditions (CD&Ms). The epidemiology of this triad is not well characterised and poses significant challenges to resource allocations, administration, and education of emergency care providers. The data collected in this study provide a comprehensive description of the emergency centre at Kenya's largest public tertiary care hospital.
This study is a retrospective chart review conducted at Kenyatta National Hospital of all patient encounters over a four-month period. Data were collected from financial and emergency centre triage records along with admission and mortality logbooks. Chief complaints and discharge diagnoses collected by specially trained research assistants were manually converted to standardised diagnoses using International Classification of Disease 10 (ICD-10) codes. ICD-10 codes were categorised into groups based on the ICD-10 classification system for presentation.
A total of 23,941 patients presented to the emergency centre during the study period for an estimated annual census of 71,823. The majority of patients were aged 18-64 years (58%) with 50% of patients being male and only 3% of unknown sex. The majority of patients (61%) were treated in the emergency centre, observed, and discharged home. Admission was the next most common disposition (33%) followed by death (6%). Head injury was the overall most common diagnosis (11%) associated with admission.
Trends toward NCDs and traumatic diseases have been described by this study and merit further investigation in both the urban and rural setting. Specifically, the significance of head injury on healthcare cost, utilisation, and patient death and disability points to the growing need of additional resources at Kenyatta National Hospital for acute care. It further demonstrates the mounting impact of trauma in Kenya and throughout the developing world.
低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)正持续面临疾病的“三重负担”——创伤性损伤、非传染性疾病(NCDs)以及伴有孕产妇和新生儿疾病的传染性疾病(CD&Ms)。这三者的流行病学特征尚不明确,给资源分配、管理以及急救护理人员的培训带来了重大挑战。本研究收集的数据全面描述了肯尼亚最大的公立三级护理医院的急诊科情况。
本研究是在肯雅塔国家医院进行的一项回顾性病历审查,涵盖了四个月期间所有患者的就诊情况。数据收集自财务和急诊科分诊记录以及入院和死亡登记册。由经过专门培训的研究助理收集的主要症状和出院诊断,使用国际疾病分类第10版(ICD - 10)编码手动转换为标准化诊断。根据ICD - 10分类系统对ICD - 10编码进行分组以呈现。
在研究期间,共有23,941名患者前往急诊科就诊,估计年就诊人数为71,823人。大多数患者年龄在18 - 64岁之间(58%),50%为男性,只有3%性别不明。大多数患者(61%)在急诊科接受治疗、观察后出院回家。入院是第二常见的处置方式(33%),其次是死亡(6%)。头部损伤是与入院相关的总体最常见诊断(11%)。
本研究描述了非传染性疾病和创伤性疾病的趋势,值得在城市和农村环境中进一步调查。具体而言,头部损伤对医疗成本、利用率以及患者死亡和残疾的影响表明,肯雅塔国家医院对急性护理额外资源的需求日益增加。这进一步证明了创伤在肯尼亚乃至整个发展中世界的影响日益增大。