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Pediatric trauma primary survey performance among surgical and non-surgical pediatric providers in a Brazilian trauma center

Authors :
Luke Caddell
Lina Roa
Paul Truche
Nivaldo Alonso
Fabio Botelho
Domingos Drumond
Simone de Campos Vieira Abib
David P. Mooney
Kathrin Zimmerman
Alexis N. Bowder
Source :
Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, Vol 5, Iss 1 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

IntroductionTrauma is the leading cause of death and disability among Brazilian children and adolescents. Trauma protocols such as those developed by the Advanced Trauma Life Support course are widely taught, but few studies have assessed the degree to which the use of protocolized trauma assessment improves outcomes. This study aims to quantify the adherence of trauma assessment protocols among different types of frontline trauma providers.MethodsA prospective observational study of pediatric trauma care in one of the busiest Latin American trauma centers was conducted during 6 months. Trauma primary survey assessments were observed and adherence to each step of a standardized primary assessment protocol was recorded. Adherence to the assessment protocol was compared among different types of providers, the time of presentation and severity of injury. The relationship between protocol adherence and clinical outcomes including mortality, length of hospital stay, admission to pediatric intensive care unit, use of blood components, mechanical ventilation and number of imaging exams performed in the first 24 hours were also assessed.ResultsEmergency department evaluations of 64 patients out of 274 pediatric admissions were observed over a period of 6 months. 50% of the primary assessments were performed by general surgeons, 34.4% by residents in general surgery and 15.6% by pediatricians. There was an average adherence rate of 34.1% to the trauma protocol. Adherence among each specific step included airway: 17.2%; breathing: 59.4%; circulation: 95.3%; disability: 28.8%; exposure: 18.8%. No differences between specialties were observed. Patients with a more thorough primary assessment underwent fewer CT scans (receiver operating characteristic curve area: 0.661; p=0.027).ConclusionsOur study demonstrates that trauma assessment protocol adherence among trauma providers is low. Thorough initial assessment reduced the use of CT scans suggesting that standardized pediatric trauma assessments may be a way to reduce unnecessary radiological imaging among children.Level of evidenceIV.Study typePediatric and global trauma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23975776
Volume :
5
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c1afe38b9c09965d1c73145fdc1d3179