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Research article summary (published 29 Jun 2009):

Surgical trauma referrals from rural level III hospitals: should our community colleagues be doing more, or less?

Full Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rural citizens die more frequently because of trauma than their urban counterparts. Skill maintenance is a potential issue among rural surgeons because of infrequent exposure to severely injured patients. The primary goal was to evaluate the outcomes of multiple injuries patients who required a laparotomy after referral from level III trauma centers. METHODS: All severely injured patients (injury severity score >12) referred to a level I trauma center from level III hospitals, during a 48-month period were evaluated. Comparisons between referrals (level III and IV) as well as survivors and nonsurvivors used standard statistical methodology. RESULTS: One thousand two hundred and thirty patients (35%) were transferred from level III (33%) and level IV (67%) centers (43% underwent an operative procedure). Only 13% required a laparotomy, whereas 87% needed procedures from other subspecialists. Referred patients had a mean injury severity score of 28, length of stay of 28 days, and mortality rate of 26%. More patients arrived hemodynamically unstable from level IV (55%) versus level III (35%) hospitals (p < 0.05). Nonsurvivors from level III centers were more likely to transfer via aircraft (100%) than from level IV hospitals (55%) (p < 0.05). Most (91%) definitive general surgery procedures could have been completed by surgeons at level III centers; however, 90% also had multisystem injuries requiring treatment by other subspecialists. CONCLUSIONS: Most severely injured patient referrals from level III and IV trauma centers in Western Canada are appropriate. The lack of consistent subspecialty coverage mandates most transfers from level III hospitals. This data will be used to engage rural Alberta physicians in an educational outreach program.

 

Author information

Author/s: Ball, Chad G (CG); Sutherland, Francis R (FR); Dixon, Elijah (E); Feliciano, David V (DV); Datta, Indraneel (I); Rajani, Ravi R (RR); Hannay, Scott (S); Gomes, Anthony (A); Kirkpatrick, Andrew W (AW);

Affiliation: Department of Surgery, Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ball.chad(-atsign-)gmail.com

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Comparative Study; Journal Article; Multicenter Study

Journal: The Journal of trauma (J Trauma), published in United States. (Language: eng)

Reference: 2009-Jul; vol 67 (issue 1) : pp 180-4

Dates: Created 2009/07/10; Completed 2009/07/28;

PMID: 19590332, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 8/20/2009, IMS Date: )

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

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