From the Division of Traumatology (E.W., J.P.B., A.M.H., Z.G., M.J.S., J.W.C.), Surgical Critical Care and Emergency Surgery, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Division of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery (D.N.H.), Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and McKenna EpiLog Fellowship in Population Health (N.R.M.), Department of Neurosurgery (N.R.M.), Perelman School of Medicine, and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (J.W.C.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2022 Nov 1;93(5):656-663. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000003689. Epub 2022 May 20.
In Philadelphia, PA, police and emergency medical services (EMS) transport patients with firearm injuries. Prior studies evaluating this system have lacked reliable prehospital times. By linking police and hospital data sets, we established a complete timeline from firearm injury to outcome. We hypothesized that police-transported patients have shorter prehospital times that, in turn, are associated with improved survival and increased unexpected survivorship at 6 and 24 hours.
This retrospective study linked patient-level data from OpenDataPhilly Shooting Victims and the Pennsylvania Trauma Systems Foundation. All adults transported to a Level I or II trauma center after firearm injury in Philadelphia from 2015 to 2018 were included. Patient-level characteristics were compared between cohorts; unexpected survivors were identified using Trauma Score-Injury Severity Score. Multiple regression estimated risk-adjusted associations between transport method, prehospital time, and outcomes.
Police-transported patients (n = 977) had significantly shorter prehospital times than EMS-transported patients (n = 320) (median, 9 minutes [interquartile range, 7-12 minutes] vs. 21 minutes [interquartile range, 16-29 minutes], respectively; p < 0.001). Police-transported patients were more often severely injured than those transported by EMS (60% vs. 50%, p = 0.002). After adjusting for confounders, police-transported patients had improved survival relative to EMS on hospital arrival (87% vs. 84%, respectively, p = 0.035), but not at 6 hours (79% vs. 78%, respectively, p = 0.126) or 24 hours after arrival (76% vs. 76%, respectively, p = 0.224). Compared with EMS, police-transported patients were significantly more likely to be unexpected survivors at 6 hours (6% vs. 2%, respectively, p < 0.001) and 24 hours (3% vs. 1%, respectively, p = 0.021).
Police-transported patients had more severe injuries, shorter prehospital times, and increased likelihood of unexpected survival compared with EMS-transported patients. After controlling for confounders, patient physiology and injury severity represent meaningful determinants of mortality in our mature trauma system, indicating an ongoing opportunity to optimize in-hospital care. Future studies should investigate causes of death among unexpected early survivors to mitigate preventable mortality.
Prognostic/Epidemiological, Level III.
在宾夕法尼亚州费城,警方和紧急医疗服务(EMS)会转运枪伤患者。既往评估该系统的研究缺乏可靠的院前时间数据。通过将警方和医院数据集进行关联,我们建立了从枪伤到结局的完整时间线。我们假设警方转运的患者有更短的院前时间,而这反过来又与生存率的提高以及 6 小时和 24 小时时意外存活的增加有关。
这是一项回顾性研究,将来自 OpenDataPhilly Shooting Victims 和宾夕法尼亚创伤系统基金会的患者水平数据进行了关联。纳入 2015 年至 2018 年间在费城因枪伤而被转运至一级或二级创伤中心的所有成年人。对两组患者的患者特征进行了比较;使用创伤评分-损伤严重程度评分识别意外存活者。多变量回归估计了转运方法、院前时间和结局之间的风险调整关联。
与 EMS 转运的患者(n = 320)相比,警方转运的患者(n = 977)的院前时间显著更短(中位数分别为 9 分钟[四分位间距 7-12 分钟]和 21 分钟[四分位间距 16-29 分钟];p < 0.001)。与 EMS 转运的患者相比,警方转运的患者伤势更严重(60%比 50%,p = 0.002)。在校正混杂因素后,与 EMS 相比,警方转运的患者在到达医院时的生存率更高(分别为 87%和 84%,p = 0.035),但在 6 小时(分别为 79%和 78%,p = 0.126)或 24 小时(分别为 76%和 76%,p = 0.224)时则不然。与 EMS 相比,警方转运的患者在 6 小时(分别为 6%和 2%,p < 0.001)和 24 小时(分别为 3%和 1%,p = 0.021)时更有可能成为意外存活者。
与 EMS 转运的患者相比,警方转运的患者伤势更严重,院前时间更短,意外存活的可能性更大。在校正混杂因素后,患者生理状况和损伤严重程度是我们成熟的创伤系统中决定死亡率的重要因素,这表明仍有机会优化院内治疗。未来的研究应调查早期意外幸存者的死亡原因,以降低可预防的死亡率。
预后/流行病学,III 级。