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Journal Article

Citation

Ertl A, Beyer K, Tarima S, Zhou Y, Groner JI, Cassidy LD. J. Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2017; 83(2): 225-229.

Affiliation

1. Institute for Health and Society, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee WI 2. Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus Ohio.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/TA.0000000000001523

PMID

28422922

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Despite significant advances in the prevention and treatment of pediatric trauma, preventable injuries continue to burden the lives of millions of children. In order to target prevention strategies, it is critical to identify areas with high burdens of pediatric trauma. Therefore, this study analyzed statewide data from the Ohio Trauma Registry (OTR) from 2007-2012 to identify geographical patterns in pediatric injury.

METHODS: Data from the first hospital of care for 16,330 pediatric trauma patients under 16 years old were analyzed using the disease mapping method adaptive spatial filtering to estimate a series of maps that display age- and sex-adjusted rates of pediatric trauma, severe trauma, and standardized mortality ratios (SMR) while controlling for population size to create stable estimates throughout the study area. The locations of all trauma centers were mapped to highlight access to trauma care.

RESULTS: Areas with significantly higher than expected rates of severe injury were identified in non-urban areas, where children lacked timely access to a Pediatric Trauma Center (PTC) or Level 1 Adult Trauma Center (ATC). Although highest SMRs were in urban areas, non-urban areas experienced elevated mortality with rates over 4 times higher than expected.

CONCLUSION: Areas with higher than expected age- and sex-adjusted rates of severe injury and mortality should be further explored to identify opportunities for injury prevention and appropriate access to timely care.


Language: en

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