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Journal Article

Citation

Ringdal KG, Lossius HM, Jones JM, Lauritsen JM, Coats TJ, Palmer CS, Lefering R, Di Bartolomeo S, Dries DJ, Soreide K, Utstein Trauma Data Collaborators. Crit. Care 2011; 15(5): R237.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/cc10485

PMID

21992236

PMCID

PMC3334788

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: No worldwide, standardised definitions exist for documenting, reporting, and comparing data from severely injured trauma patients. This study evaluated the feasibility of collecting the data variables of the international consensus-derived Utstein Trauma Template. METHODS: Trauma centres from three different continents were invited to submit Utstein Trauma Template core data during a defined period, for up to 50 consecutive trauma patients. Directly admitted patients with a New Injury Severity Score (NISS) equal to or above 16 were included. Main outcome variables were data completeness, data differences, and data collection difficulty. RESULTS: Centres from Europe (n=20), North America (n=3), and Australia (n=1) submitted data on 965 patients, of which 783 were included. Median age was 41 years (interquartile range [IQR] 24-60), and 73.1% were male. Median NISS was 27 (IQR 20-38), and blunt trauma predominated (91.1%). Of the 36 Utstein variables, 13 (36%) were collected by all participating centres. Eleven (46%) centres applied definitions of the survival outcome variable that were different from those of the template. Seventeen (71%) centres used the recommended version of the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS). Three variables (age, gender, and AIS) were documented in all patients. Completeness >80% was achieved for 28 variables, and 20 variables were >90% complete. CONCLUSIONS: The Utstein Template was feasible across international trauma centres for the majority of its data variables, with the exception of certain physiological and time variables. Major differences were found in the definition of survival and in AIS coding. The current results give a clear indication of the attainability of information and may serve as a stepping-stone towards creation of a European trauma registry.


Language: en

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