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Observational Study
Spectrum and frequency of critical procedures performed at a Level I adult and pediatric trauma center.
- Rebecca L Kornas, Stephen W Smith, Erik Fagerstrom, Audrey Hendrickson, Jean Tersteeg, David Plummer, Brian E Driver, and Ashley M Strobel.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA; Department of Emergency Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, CO, USA.
- Am J Emerg Med. 2021 Jun 1; 44: 272-276.
ObjectivesThe primary objective of this study was to provide physician-level data about the frequency of critical procedures at a combined adult and pediatric Level I trauma center, high-acuity, high-volume academic ED. The inspiration for this study question came from a previous study by Mittiga et al. (2013) describing pediatric critical procedure data at a similar high-acuity, high-volume, pediatric-only academic ED. Our secondary objective is to compare our pediatric level procedural spectrum and frequency with those published by Mittiga et al. (2013).MethodsThis prospective observational study occurred over eleven consecutive months at an urban, Level I combined adult/pediatric trauma center with 96,000 annual visits (8500 pediatric). We recorded only procedures performed in the resuscitation bays. All data analysis is descriptive.ResultsOver eleven months, data on 3891 resuscitations were collected (3686 adults and 205 children); 38 faculty physicians supervised 1838 total critical procedures, 64 on children. The mean number of critical procedures per physician per month was 4.42 (0.15 on children). Additionally, ultrasound for intravenous access, extended focused assessment with sonography for trauma (e-FAST), or cardiac ultrasound were performed in 3862 resuscitations (178 pediatric).ConclusionsEmergency medicine faculty physicians at a combined Level I adult and pediatric trauma center performed and/or supervised 4.4 total (0.15 pediatric) critical procedures per month per faculty which is nearly 6 times more critical procedures monthly than faculty at a similar volume pediatric-only trauma center. However, fewer critical procedures were performed on children at the combined facility.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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