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Evaluation of the Effects of Standard Rescue Procedure on Severe Trauma Treatment in China

Authors :
Xiao-Feng Yin
Tian-Bing Wang
Pei-Xun Zhang
Yu-Hui Kou
Dian-Ying Zhang
Kai Yu
De-Cheng Lyu
Mao-Zheng Liu
Dong-Sheng Zhou
Peng Zhang
Jue-Hua Jing
Wei-Wei Ge
Li Ying Cao
Guo-Sheng Wang
Shao-Jie Deng
Weng-Hua Liu
Mao Zhang
Yong-An Xu
Kun Zhang
Bing Li
Wei Wang
Zhong-Li Gao
Cheng-La Yi
Bao-Guo Jiang
Source :
Chinese Medical Journal, Vol 128, Iss 10, Pp 1301-1305 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer, 2015.

Abstract

Background: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of standard rescue procedure (SRP) in improving severe trauma treatments in China. Methods: This study was conducted in 12 hospitals located in geographically and industrially different cities in China. A standard procedure on severe trauma rescue was established as a general rule for staff training and patient treatment. A regional network (system) efficiently integrating prehospital rescue, emergency room treatments, and hospital specialist treatments was built under the rule for information sharing and improving severe trauma treatments. Treatment outcomes were compared between before and 1 year after the implementation of the SRP. Results: The outcomes of a total of 74,615 and 12,051 trauma cases were collected from 12 hospitals before and after the implementation of the SRP. Implementation of the SRP led to efficient cooperation and information sharing of different treatment services. The emergency response time, prehospital transit time, emergency rescue time, consultation call time, and mortality rate of patients were 24.24 ± 4.32 min, 45.69 ± 3.89 min, 6.38 ± 1.05 min, 17.53 ± 0.72 min, and 33.82% ± 3.87% (n = 441), respectively, before the implementation of the standardization and significantly reduced to 10.11 ± 3.21 min, 22.39 ± 4.32 min, 3.26 ± 0.89 min, 3.45 ± 0.45 min, and 20.49% ± 3.11%, separately (n = 495, P < 0.05) after that. Conclusions: Staff training and SRP can significantly improve the efficiency of severe trauma treatments in China.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03666999
Volume :
128
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Chinese Medical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5038cb5d26854947b559124d603d08ec
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/0366-6999.156768