Wyatt J P, Beard D, Gray A, Busuttil A, Robertson C E
Accident and Emergency Department, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Injury. 1996 Jun;27(5):337-40. doi: 10.1016/0020-1383(95)00233-2.
Data on all deaths after injuries in Lothian and Borders regions of south-east Scotland were collected prospectively over 2 years. Post-mortems were performed after all deaths and Injury Severity Scores (ISS) calculated. There were 331 deaths at a rate of 20 per 100,000 per year; of those who died 49 per cent were younger than 40 years and most were male; 37 per cent of deaths were caused by road traffic accidents, 16 per cent by falls and 15 per cent by hangings. Two hundred and forty-eight patients (75 per cent) were either dead when found or died instantly with unsurvivable injuries (ISS = 75). A further five patients died in the first hour after injury and before reaching hospital. Nineteen (7 per cent) died between 1 and 4 h after injury, 59 (17 per cent) died more than 4 h after. These results demonstrate the rate, causes and timing of deaths following injuries in one UK region. The pattern of these deaths differs markedly from that previously described in the US. There is no evidence to support the concept of a trimodal distribution of trauma deaths. The greatest potential to reduce the number of trauma deaths lies with prevention.