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Planning of traumatological hospital resources for a major winter sporting event as illustrated by the 2005 Winter Universiad.

Authors :
Oberladstaetter, J.
Kamelger, F. S.
Rosenberger, R.
Dallapozza, Ch.
Struve, P.
Luger, T.
Fink, Ch.
Attal, R.
Source :
Archives of Orthopaedic & Trauma Surgery; Mar2009, Vol. 129 Issue 3, p359-362, 4p, 3 Charts
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The 22nd Student World Winter Games took place in January 2005 in Innsbruck and Seefeld, Austria. Exactly 1,500 athletes of 50 nationalities competed in 69 events in ten winter sports. A total number of 750 functionaries, 800 volunteers and 85,000 spectators participated in the second largest winter sports event behind the Olympic winter games. The aim of this study was to evaluate the needed resources to ensure traumatological care for an event of that size. At the medical “call-center” all consultations, as well as patient data, diagnosis, and medical treatment were recorded using a preset protocol. Further, all patients treated in the University Hospital Innsbruck were registered with an emphasis on trauma patients. Forty-eight of 65 patients transported to the hospital as a result of the Universiade were trauma patients, 37 of whom were athletes. The gender distribution was 34:14 (m:f). Ice hockey players had the highest rate of injury (25% of all injured athletes), followed by alpine skiers (20.8% of injured athletes). The highest ISS was nine. Forty-three patients got ambulatory treatment, five were admitted to the hospital and surgical treatment was conducted in three cases. Mean patient number was 4.8 per day. No additional personnel, structural, or technical hospital resources were needed to accommodate a large winter sports event like the Universiad. Thus, a level-B trauma center with an emergency room and independent traumatological department with around the clock surgical capability seems to be sufficient to provide traumatological care for an event of this size if the possibility of patient transport to a larger facility exists in the case of catastrophic events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09368051
Volume :
129
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Archives of Orthopaedic & Trauma Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36479278
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-008-0658-y