J Trauma
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The relative impact of inhalation injury, burn size, and age on overall outcome following burn injury was examined in 1447 consecutive burn patients over a five and a half year period. The overall mortality for all patients was 9.5% (138 of 1447). The presence of inhalation injury, increasing burn size, and advancing age were all associated with an increased mortality (p < 0.01). ⋯ Using multivariate analysis inhalation injury was found to be an important variable in determining outcome, but the most important factor in predicting mortality was %TBSA burn (accuracy = 92.8%) or a combination of %TBSA burn and patient age (accuracy = 93.0%). Adding inhalation injury only slightly improved the ability to predict mortality (accuracy = 93.3%). The presence of inhalation injury is significantly associated with mortality after thermal injury but adds little to the prediction of mortality using %TBSA and age alone.
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This study was designed to document the reasons hospitals have been unsuccessfully peer reviewed as potential trauma centers. ⋯ A limited but critical set of criteria enable a hospital to function as a trauma center. Trauma quality improvement is a poorly understood but a correctable issue. Surgical and hospital commitment are essential for verification. Prior consultation may be of benefit.
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Quality assurance/quality improvement (QA-QI) is a priority for maintaining the highest standards of care in trauma systems. To be an effective tool for system review, the QA-QI indicators should identify patients with higher rates of morbidity and mortality from injury. While the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Operations have identified certain audit filters within the trauma system, there are few data to substantiate the value of these audit filters for trauma care. ⋯ This study demonstrates that several ACS clinical indicators, as currently written, are not useful in identifying patients at higher risk for poor outcome. The indicators need further definition to be of value in the quality review process. Specifically, the study suggests that audit filters should be data driven and based upon analyses of large populations of injured patients and their outcomes to be valid QA-QI tools.
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A recent retrospective analysis of femur fractures concluded that early surgical fixation in patients who have sustained blunt thoracic trauma (AIS score for Thorax > or = 2) was a risk factor for postoperative pulmonary failure. We conducted a review of all femur fractures admitted to a level I trauma center from November, 1988 to May, 1993. Inclusion criteria were ISS > or = 18, mid-shaft femur fractures treated with reamed intramedullary fixation, and no mortalities secondary to head trauma or hemorrhagic shock. ⋯ Mortality rate, length of stay (LOS), LOS in the TICU, and duration of mechanical ventilation tended to be greater in patients with delayed fracture fixation, however, this was not statistically significant. The N2 patients had a pneumonia rate of 38% compared with 10% in group N1 (p = 0.07). The T2 patients had a pneumonia rate of 48% compared with 14% in group T1 (p = 0.002).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Comparative Study
A prospective comparison of two multiple organ dysfunction/failure scoring systems for prediction of mortality in critical surgical illness.
Multiple organ failure (MOF) is the primary cause of death in surgical intensive care units (SICU). Mortality increases with an increasing number of failed organs, but it has been recognized that lesser degrees of organ dysfunction occur commonly. Such gradations of the multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) are postulated to provide more descriptive and predictive power. ⋯ Death was equally likely for comparable degrees of organ dysfunction and failure. Mortality increased (p < 0.01, ANOVA) with higher scores in both systems. In patients with 9-12 organ dysfunction points, the number of failed organs was 1.5 +/- 0.2 in 34 survivors, versus 2.9 +/- 0.3 in the 14 nonsurvivors (p < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)