Department of Surgery, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States of America.
Department of Surgery, Universidad de Antioquia, Medellin, Colombia.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 6;15(11):e0241553. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241553. eCollection 2020.
Interfacility transfers may reflect a time delay of definitive surgical care, but few studies have examined the prevalence of interfacility transfers in the urban low- and middle-income (LMIC) setting. The aim of this study was to determine the number of interfacility transfers required for surgical and obstetric conditions in an urban MIC setting to better understand access to definitive surgical care among LMIC patients.
A retrospective analysis of public interfacility transfer records was conducted from April 2015 to April 2016 in Cali, Colombia. Data were obtained from the single municipal ambulance agency providing publicly funded ambulance transfers in the city. Interfacility transfers were defined as any patient transfer between two healthcare facilities. We identified the number of transfers for patients with surgical conditions and categorized transfers based on patient ICD-9-CM codes. We compared surgical transfers from public vs. private healthcare facilities by condition type (surgical, obstetric, nonsurgical), transferring physician specialty, and transfer acuity (code blue, emergent, urgent and nonurgent) using logistic regression.
31,659 patient transports occurred over the 13-month study period. 22250 (70.2%) of all transfers were interfacility transfers and 7777 (35%) of transfers were for patients with surgical conditions with an additional 2,244 (10.3%) for obstetric conditions. 49% (8660/17675) of interfacility transfers from public hospitals were for surgical and obstetric conditions vs 32% (1466/4580) for private facilities (P<0.001). The most common surgical conditions requiring interfacility transfer were fractures (1,227, 5.4%), appendicitis (913, 4.1%), wounds (871, 3.9%), abdominal pain (818, 3.6%), trauma (652, 2.9%), and acute abdomen (271, 1.2%).
Surgical and obstetric conditions account for nearly half of all urban interfacility ambulance transfers. The most common reasons for transfer are basic surgical conditions with public healthcare facilities transferring a greater proportion of patient with surgical conditions than private facilities. Timely access to an initial healthcare facility may not be a reliable surrogate of definitive surgical care given the substantial need for interfacility transfers.
医疗机构间的转院可能反映了获得确定性外科治疗的时间延迟,但很少有研究调查城市中低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)环境中医疗机构间转院的普遍性。本研究旨在确定城市中 MIC 环境下外科和产科病症所需的医疗机构间转院数量,以更好地了解 LMIC 患者获得确定性外科治疗的机会。
对 2015 年 4 月至 2016 年 4 月期间在哥伦比亚卡利市进行的公共医疗机构间转院记录进行了回顾性分析。数据来自于该市唯一一家提供公共资助救护车转院服务的市政救护车机构。医疗机构间转院被定义为在两个医疗机构之间的任何患者转院。我们确定了外科病症患者的转院数量,并根据患者 ICD-9-CM 代码对转院进行了分类。我们使用逻辑回归比较了来自公共和私立医疗机构的外科转院患者的条件类型(外科、产科、非外科)、转院医生的专业和转院紧急程度(蓝色代码、紧急、紧急和非紧急)。
在 13 个月的研究期间,共发生了 31659 例患者转运。所有转院中,22250 例(70.2%)为医疗机构间转院,7777 例(35%)为外科病症患者的转院,另有 2244 例(10.3%)为产科病症患者的转院。来自公立医院的医疗机构间转院中有 49%(8660/17675)是为了治疗外科和产科病症,而私立医疗机构的这一比例为 32%(1466/4580)(P<0.001)。需要医疗机构间转院的最常见外科病症包括骨折(1227 例,5.4%)、阑尾炎(913 例,4.1%)、创伤(652 例,2.9%)、腹痛(818 例,3.6%)、腹部急症(271 例,1.2%)。
外科和产科病症占城市医疗机构间救护车转运的近一半。最常见的转院原因是基本的外科病症,公立医院转院的外科病症患者比例高于私立医院。鉴于对医疗机构间转院的大量需求,及时获得初始医疗服务可能不能可靠地替代确定性外科治疗。