The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery
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There are numerous studies about morbidity and mortality, technical complications and in-hospital factors after proximal femoral fracture surgery in the elderly. Although experienced clinicians are often able to make an accurate prediction, little information is available about the factors that allow early determination of whether a patient may return to the community. The present study aimed to provide that information and, hence, allow better use of health resources. ⋯ Consideration of the ADL score, age and mental state at the time of admission to hospital is all that is needed to determine return to the community. This is helpful to the patient and their family, and allows an early and appropriate referral pattern to either community services or a nursing home.
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Comparative Study
Addition of physicians to paramedic helicopter services decreases blunt trauma mortality.
The authors hypothesized that the addition of critical care physicians to the flight crew of paramedic helicopter services would decrease mortality in blunt trauma, and that this would be due to the greater procedural capability and clinical judgement of the physician. ⋯ Physicians perform a greater number of procedures at accident scenes without increasing scene time. This results in significantly lower mortality. Critical care physicians should be added to paramedic helicopter services for scene response to blunt trauma.
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The aim of the present review was to assess the suitability of hospital disaster medical teams' training, personal safety and medical equipment for site casualty work at multiple casualty incidents (MCI), and to compare this with retrieval teams who routinely provide pre-hospital trauma care. The options for the provision of a site medical response based upon international and Australian disaster planning guidelines are also reviewed. ⋯ Hospital medical teams suffer from the same problems of inadequate training, experience and personal safety equipment that are identified in previous reports from disasters overseas. The continued focus on hospital medical teams in counter-disaster planning as the primary source of on-site medical services is inappropriate because, with the exception of retrieval doctors who routinely provide pre-hospital trauma care, appropriately trained and experienced doctors are unlikely to be available from within the hospital system.