Weinstein Eric S, Cuthbertson Joseph L, Ragazzoni Luca, Verde Manuela
CRIMEDIM, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy.
Monash University, Disaster Resilience Initiative, Clayton, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2020 Oct;35(5):538-545. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X20000862. Epub 2020 Jul 9.
Emerging evidence is guiding changes in prehospital management of potential spinal injuries. The majority of settings related to current recommendations are in resource-rich environments (RREs), whereas there is a lack of guidance on the provision of spinal motion restriction (SMR) in resource-scarce environments (RSEs), such as: mass-casualty incidents (MCIs); low-middle income countries; complex humanitarian emergencies; conflict zones; and prolonged transport times. The application of Translational Science (TS) in the Disaster Medicine (DM) context was used to develop this study, leading to statements that can be used in the creation of evidence-based clinical guidelines (CGs).
What is appropriate SMR in RSEs?
The first round of this modified Delphi (mD) study was a structured focus group conducted at the World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine (WADEM) Congress in Brisbane Australia on May 9, 2019. The result of the focus group discussion of open-ended questions produced ten statements that were added to ten statements derived from Fischer (2018) to create the second mD round questionnaire.Academic researchers and educators, operational first responders, or first receivers of patients with suspected spinal injuries were identified to be mD experts. Experts rated their agreement with each statement on a seven-point linear numeric scale. Consensus amongst experts was defined as a standard deviation ≤1.0. Statements that were in agreement reaching consensus were included in the final report; those that were not in agreement but reached consensus were removed from further consideration. Those not reaching consensus advanced to the third mD round.For subsequent rounds, experts were shown the mean response and their own response for each of the remaining statements and asked to reconsider their rating. As above, those that did not reach consensus advanced to the next round until consensus was reached for each statement.
Twenty-two experts agreed to participate with 19 completing the second mD round and 16 completing the third mD round. Eleven statements reached consensus. Nine statements did not reach consensus.
Experts reached consensus offering 11 statements to be incorporated into the creation of SMR CGs in RSEs. The nine statements that did not reach consensus can be further studied and potentially modified to determine if these can be considered in SMR CGs in RSEs.
新出现的证据正在引导潜在脊柱损伤的院前管理发生变化。当前建议所涉及的大多数情况都处于资源丰富的环境(RREs)中,而在资源稀缺的环境(RSEs)中,如大规模伤亡事件(MCIs)、低收入和中等收入国家、复杂的人道主义紧急情况、冲突地区以及长时间转运时,缺乏关于提供脊柱运动限制(SMR)的指导。本研究运用了灾害医学(DM)背景下的转化科学(TS)来开展,得出了可用于制定循证临床指南(CGs)的陈述。
在资源稀缺环境中何种SMR是合适的?
这项改良德尔菲(mD)研究的第一轮是于2019年5月9日在澳大利亚布里斯班举行的世界灾害与急诊医学协会(WADEM)大会上进行的一次结构化焦点小组讨论。对开放式问题的焦点小组讨论结果产生了十条陈述,这些陈述被添加到源自菲舍尔(2018年)的十条陈述中,以创建第二轮mD问卷。学术研究人员和教育工作者、一线急救人员或疑似脊柱损伤患者的首批接收者被确定为mD专家。专家们使用七点线性数字量表对每条陈述表示同意的程度进行评分。专家之间的共识被定义为标准差≤1.0。达成共识的陈述被纳入最终报告;未达成共识但得到一致意见的陈述则不再进一步考虑。未达成共识的陈述进入第三轮mD。在后续轮次中,向专家展示其余每条陈述的平均回复和他们自己的回复,并要求他们重新考虑自己的评分。如上所述,未达成共识的陈述进入下一轮,直到每条陈述都达成共识。
22名专家同意参与,19名完成了第二轮mD,16名完成了第三轮mD。11条陈述达成了共识。9条陈述未达成共识。
专家们达成共识,提供了11条陈述以纳入资源稀缺环境中SMR临床指南的制定。未达成共识的9条陈述可进一步研究并可能进行修改,以确定这些陈述是否可在资源稀缺环境中的SMR临床指南中予以考虑。