Duke University School of Nursing, Duke Global Health Institute, 307 Trent Drive, Durham, NC 27710, United States.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Raleigh Emergency Medicine Associates, UNC REX Healthcare, Raleigh, NC, United States.
Injury. 2022 Jun;53(6):1954-1960. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2022.03.043. Epub 2022 Mar 25.
Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) are a critical global health challenge, with disproportionate negative impact in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). People who suffer severe TBI in LMICs are twice as likely to die than those in high-income countries, and survivors experience substantially poorer outcomes. In the hospital, patients with severe TBI are typically seen in intensive care units (ICU) to receive advanced monitoring and lifesaving treatment. However, the quality and outcomes of ICU care in LMICs are often unclear. We analyzed secondary data from a cohort of 605 adult patients who presented to the Emergency Department (ED) of a Tanzanian hospital with a moderate or severe TBI. We examined patient characteristics and performed two binary logistic regression models to assess predictors of ICU admission and patient outcome. Patients were often young (median age = 32, SD = 15), overwhelmingly male (88.9%), and experienced long delays from time of injury to presentation in the ED (median=12 h, SD = 168). A majority of patients (87.8%) underwent surgery and 55.6% ultimately had a "good recovery" with minimal disability, while 34.0% died. Patients were more likely to be seen in the ICU if they had worse baseline symptoms and were over age 60. TBI surgery conveyed a 37% risk reduction for poor TBI outcome. However, ICU patients had a 3.91 times higher risk of poor TBI outcome as compared to those not seen in the ICU, despite controlling for baseline symptoms. The findings point to the need for targeted interventions among young men, improvements in pre-hospital transportation and care, and continued efforts to increase the quality of surgical and ICU care in this setting. It is unlikely that poorer outcome among ICU patients was indicative of poorer care in the ICU; this finding was more likely due to lack of data on several factors that inform care decisions (e.g., comorbid conditions or injuries). Nevertheless, future efforts should seek to increase the capacity of ICUs in low-resource settings to monitor and treat TBI according to international guidelines, and should improve predictive modeling to identify risk for poor outcome.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是一个全球性的健康挑战,在中低收入国家(LMICs)造成了不成比例的负面影响。在 LMICs 中,遭受严重 TBI 的人死亡的可能性是高收入国家的两倍,而幸存者的预后则明显较差。在医院,重症 TBI 患者通常在重症监护病房(ICU)接受高级监测和救生治疗。然而,LMICs 中 ICU 护理的质量和结果往往不清楚。我们分析了来自坦桑尼亚一家医院急诊科的 605 名成人中度或重度 TBI 患者的队列的次要数据。我们检查了患者的特征,并进行了两个二元逻辑回归模型,以评估 ICU 入院和患者预后的预测因素。患者通常很年轻(中位数年龄为 32 岁,标准差为 15 岁),绝大多数是男性(88.9%),从受伤到急诊科就诊的时间延迟很长(中位数=12 小时,标准差=168 小时)。大多数患者(87.8%)接受了手术,55.6%最终有轻微残疾的“良好恢复”,而 34.0%死亡。如果患者的基线症状更差且年龄超过 60 岁,他们更有可能在 ICU 中接受治疗。TBI 手术可将不良 TBI 结果的风险降低 37%。然而,尽管控制了基线症状,ICU 患者的 TBI 结果不良的风险仍比未在 ICU 接受治疗的患者高 3.91 倍。这些发现表明,需要针对年轻男性采取有针对性的干预措施,改善院前运输和护理,并继续努力提高该环境中手术和 ICU 护理的质量。ICU 患者预后较差不太可能表明 ICU 护理较差;这种发现更可能是由于缺乏告知护理决策的几个因素的数据(例如,合并症或损伤)。尽管如此,未来的努力应寻求增加资源匮乏环境中 ICU 的容量,以根据国际指南监测和治疗 TBI,并应改善预测模型,以确定不良预后的风险。