Section of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Population Health, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
Injury Prevention Research Unit, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Inj Prev. 2021 Dec;27(6):582-586. doi: 10.1136/injuryprev-2020-044057. Epub 2021 Jan 29.
Injury is a leading cause of death and health loss in New Zealand and internationally. The potentially fatal or severe consequences of many injuries can be reduced through an optimally structured prehospital trauma care system that can provide timely and appropriate care.
To investigate the relationship between emergency medical services (EMS) care and survival to hospital for major trauma cases in New Zealand.
This project is a retrospective cohort study of New Zealand major trauma cases attended by EMS providers over a 2-year period. Outcomes include survival to hospital and survival in hospital for at least 24 hours. The project has three phases: (1) identification of the cohort and assembling a bespoke longitudinal dataset linking EMS, New Zealand Major Trauma Registry and Coronial data; (2) describing the pathways and processes of care to inform an investigation of the relationships between types of EMS care and survival using propensity score modelling to adjust for case-mix differences; (3) assessment of the implications for future practice, policy and research.
The study findings will help identify opportunities to optimise the delivery of EMS care in New Zealand by informing the development or revision of existing major trauma EMS policies and guidelines, and to provide a baseline for monitoring the impact of future initiatives. Establishing an evidence-base will support a whole-of-system appraisal that could include broader complex variables relating to healthcare services throughout the continuum of trauma care.
在新西兰和国际上,伤害是导致死亡和健康损失的主要原因。通过构建一个结构合理的院前创伤救治体系,可以提供及时和适当的救治,从而降低许多创伤的潜在致命或严重后果。
调查新西兰急救医疗服务(EMS)与重大创伤病例住院存活率之间的关系。
这是一项在新西兰 EMS 提供者救治的重大创伤病例的回顾性队列研究,为期 2 年。研究结果包括存活至医院和存活至少 24 小时。该项目分为三个阶段:(1)确定队列并组装一个定制的纵向数据集,将 EMS、新西兰重大创伤登记处和验尸数据联系起来;(2)描述救治途径和流程,以调查不同类型的 EMS 救治与存活率之间的关系,使用倾向评分模型调整病例组合差异;(3)评估对未来实践、政策和研究的影响。
研究结果将有助于确定优化新西兰 EMS 救治的机会,为制定或修订现有的重大创伤 EMS 政策和指南提供信息,并为监测未来举措的影响提供基线。建立一个证据基础将支持对整个系统的评估,其中可能包括与创伤救治连续体中整个医疗保健服务相关的更广泛的复杂变量。