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Journal Article

Citation

Segal D, Shakarchy-Kaminsky N, Zloof Y, Talmy T, Shapiro G, Radomislensky I, Tsur AM, Gelikas S, Karp E, Benov A. Isr. Med. Assoc. J. 2022; 24(9): 606-611.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Israel Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

36168181

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medical organizations worldwide aim for equity and diversity in the medical profession to improve care quality. Data on whether the caregiver gender affects outcomes in the prehospital setting are essential but scarce compared to available in-hospital studies.

OBJECTIVES: To analyze the rates of missed injuries in the prehospital setting and determine whether these rates were associated with the gender of the on-field physician or paramedic.

METHODS: A retrospective record review was conducted, which included trauma records documented in two trauma registries, the prehospital Israel Defense Forces-Trauma Registry (IDF-TR), and the in-hospital Israeli National Trauma Registry (INTR). Missed injuries were defined as injuries documented in the INTR but not in the IDF-TR. A multivariable regression analysis was performed to assess the association between provider's gender and missed injuries.

RESULTS: Of 490 casualties, 369 (75.3%) were treated by teams that included only male paramedics or physicians. In 386 (78.8%) cases, a physician was a part of the prehospital team. In all, 94 (19.2%) casualties sustained injuries that were missed by the prehospital medical team. Missed injuries were not associated with the gender of the paramedic or physician (odds ratio 1.242, 95% confidence interval 0.69-2.193).

CONCLUSIONS: No association was found between the gender of the medical provider in the prehospital setting and the rate of missed injuries. These results should encourage prehospital emergency medical systems to aim for a balanced and diverse caregiver population.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Male; Retrospective Studies; Registries; *Emergency Medical Services/methods; Israel/epidemiology; *Wounds and Injuries/diagnosis/epidemiology/therapy

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