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Journal Article

Citation

Mazahir S, Pardhan A, Rao S. Injury 2015; 46(4): 610-615.

Affiliation

State Major Trauma Service, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.injury.2015.01.016

PMID

25636534

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A number of studies have investigated the effect of presentation time on the outcome of patients presenting following trauma. However, it is uncertain whether there is a difference in the incidence of missed injuries between patients presenting during 'office hours' to those presenting in the 'after-hours' period.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analysed all patients recorded in the Trauma Registry of Royal Perth Hospital (a Level I Trauma Centre for adults in Western Australia) between 2003 and 2013. Patients were divided into 3 groups i.e. those presenting during office hours, those presenting 'after-hours' on a weekday and those presenting on a weekend. In 2008, the State Major Trauma Unit (SMTU) at RPH was initiated following which in-hospital cover by the Trauma Fellows was extended to 11 PM on weekdays. The study was therefore divided into two time periods i.e. pre-SMTU (2003-2007) and post-SMTU (2008-2013).

RESULTS: 53,030 patients were recorded in the Trauma Registry in the 10-year period (major and minor trauma). There were 2519 missed injuries in 1262 patients (2.4%). Of these, 2.2% patients presented during office hours, 2.6% 'after-hours on a weekday' and 2.5% on weekends. The odds of missing an injury were 1.2 times higher if the patient presented after-hours (p=0.048). Missed injury rates were found to have increased over the past 10 years (p=0.0179). The odds of missing an injury in 2013 were 1.34 times higher than in 2003. Most of the missed injuries were AIS 1 and 2 (19.8 and 59%) and 55% had no clinical impact on the patients. Thoracic Spine and abdominal injuries were most commonly missed. The only region to show a significant difference between the 3 groups of patients studied was the abdomen (5.3% vs 11.1% vs 6.3%; p=0.004). It was also seen that a larger number of hollow viscus abdominal injuries (5.2%) were missed when compared to solid organs (3.2%; p<0.001).

CONCLUSION: Injuries in patients sustaining trauma are more likely to be missed 'after-hours' than during 'office hours'. T-spine and abdominal injuries are more likely to be missed when compared to other anatomical regions of the body.


Language: en

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