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Global public health · Jan 2011
Collecting injury surveillance data in low- and middle-income countries: the Cape Town Trauma Registry pilot.
- Nadine Schuurman, Jonathan Cinnamon, Richard Matzopoulos, Vanessa Fawcett, Andrew Nicol, and S Morad Hameed.
- Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada. nadine@sfu.ca
- Glob Public Health. 2011 Jan 1;6(8):874-89.
AbstractInjury is a major public health issue, responsible for 5 million deaths each year, equivalent to the total mortality caused by HIV, malaria and tuberculosis combined. The World Health Organisation estimates that of the total worldwide deaths due to injury, more than 90% occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Despite the burden of injury sustained by LMIC, there are few continuing injury surveillance systems for collection and analysis of injury data. We describe a hospital-based trauma surveillance instrument for collection of a minimum data-set for calculating common injury scoring metrics including the Abbreviated Injury Scale and the Injury Severity Score. The Cape Town Trauma Registry (CTTR) is designed for injury surveillance in low-resource settings. A pilot at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town was conducted for one month to demonstrate the feasibility of systematic data collection and analysis, and to explore challenges of implementing a trauma registry in a LMIC. Key characteristics of the CTTR include: ability to calculate injury severity, key minimal data elements, expansion to include quality indicators and minimal drain on human resources based on few fields. The CTTR provides a strategy to describe the distribution and consequences of injury in a high trauma volume, low-resource environment.
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