TRAUMA OUTCOMES IN THE RURAL DEVELOPING-WORLD - COMPARISON WITH AN URBAN LEVEL-I TRAUMA CENTER

Citation
Cn. Mock et al., TRAUMA OUTCOMES IN THE RURAL DEVELOPING-WORLD - COMPARISON WITH AN URBAN LEVEL-I TRAUMA CENTER, The journal of trauma, injury, infection, and critical care, 35(4), 1993, pp. 518-523
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care
Volume
35
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
518 - 523
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
Trauma is well known as a major cause of death and disability in the d eveloped world, but has been inadequately studied in developing nation s. We reviewed 539 trauma patients admitted from 1987 through 1991 to a rural African hospital, the Holy Family Hospital (HFH) in Berekum, G hana, and compared these results with 14,270 patients admitted during the same period to a level I trauma center, the Harborview Medical Cen ter (HMC) in Seattle, Washington. At HFH, 59% of patients were seen >2 4 hours after injury, compared with 4% of HMC patients (p < 0.001). On ly 25% of HFH patients received prehospital care, compared with 82% of HMC patients (p < 0.001). Mean ISS was higher at HMC (10.0 +/- 6.3) t han at HFH (6.7 +/- 6.5) (p < 0.001), but trauma mortality rates were identical (6%) at both institutions. Neurologic injuries were the lead ing cause of death at both HFH (62%) and HMC (54%). There was no signi ficant difference between institutions in mortality for patients with ISS 1-8 (HMC: 0.7% n = 6390; HFH: 0.3%, n = 342). There was a marked d ecrease in mortality for patients with ISS 9-24 at HMC (3%, n = 3709) compared with HFH (10%, n = 146) (p < 0.001). There was a less pronoun ced decrease in mortality for patients with ISS > 24 at HMC (41%, n = 1520) compared with HFH (73%, n = 26) (p < 0.01). The type and the sev erity of injuries causing fatalities in this developing nation suggest that no inexpensive hospital-based changes would improve outcomes. Th e lack of prehospital care and the long delays in transport to the hos pital indicate areas in which less costly interventions might decrease mortality from trauma.