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BACKGROUND: Trauma-induced coagulopathy (TIC) is associated with negative outcomes. Pediatric TIC has been described most often in older children. Children undergo normal developmental hemostasis, but it is unknown how this process impacts the risk of TIC across childhood. AIMS: To understand variations in coagulation testing and TIC across pediatric age groups. METHODS: We evaluated testing patterns of coagulation studies at presentation and over the first 72 h of hospitalization by pediatric age group at a large, Level I trauma center, 2015-2020. The frequency of TIC was determined using published, age-specific reference ranges and controlling for injury severity. We performed subgroup analyses of those with isolated severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and those who presented directly from the scene of injury. RESULTS: Data from 2409 pediatric patients were available; 333 patients had isolated severe TBI. Children <1 year were least likely to be tested for TIC at presentation and over the first 72 h, even among the most injured. Fibrinogen testing was uncommon, regardless of injury severity. TIC was common: 22% of patients had TIC at presentation and 35% by 72 h. Greater injury severity was associated with TIC. Children 1-4 and 5-9 years had a higher frequency of TIC at presentation and over 72 h compared to older children in the least injured cohort. We saw no difference in frequency of TIC between age groups in the subset with isolated severe TBI. Using age-specific criteria, patients most often met TIC criteria by INR/PT, followed by platelet count, and least commonly by aPTT. The presence of TIC was associated with in-hospital mortality (OR 4.10, 95% CI 2.06-8.17). CONCLUSIONS: Significant sampling bias exists in clinical data collection among injured children and adolescents. Contrary to previous reports and using age-specific TIC criteria, younger children are not at lower risk of TIC than older children when controlling for injury severity.
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BACKGROUND: Recent studies suggest Black patients are transfused less often and at lower hemoglobin levels than White patients. In elective surgery, Black and Non-White patients have greater estimated blood loss and transfusion frequency. We asked whether similar transfusion disparities are observable in acute trauma resuscitation. METHODS: In a single-center retrospective analysis of trauma registry/blood-bank-linked data from a large US trauma center, we identified all acute trauma patients 2011-2022. Our data sources permitted distinction of Race and Ethnicity and therefor binning as Non-White-race/not Hispanic plus any-race/Hispanic or White/not Hispanic. We tallied Injury Severity Scores mild through profound (ISS 1-9, 9-15, 16-25, >25), type (blunt vs. penetrating) and mechanism (firearms, etc.), and associated blood use overall and in the first, first four, and first 24 h, comparing results with chi square, p < .01. RESULTS: Overall, 50,394 (68.41%) acute trauma patients were classified as White and 23,251 (31.7%) as Other than White. White patients were more likely to receive any blood products (17.8% vs. 11.9%), but, for all measures of urgency/quantity, Non-White patients were transfused more often (respectively, first 4 h, 51.9% vs. 42.1%; ≥3u/first hour, 18.5% vs. 11.0%; ≥10u/24 h, 8.1% vs. 3.8%) (all p < .001). White patients were far more likely to have blunt injury than Non-White patients, (77.2% vs. 42.6%), less likely to have penetrating injury (10.1% vs. 14%) and far less likely to be injured by firearms (30.6% vs. 56.9%) (all p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: At our center, blood use in acute trauma resuscitation was associated with injury severity and mechanism, not race/ethnicity.
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BACKGROUND: Incorporating post-discharge data into trauma registries would allow for better research on patient outcomes, including disparities in outcomes. This pilot study tested a follow-up data collection process to be incorporated into existing trauma care systems, prioritizing low-cost automated response modalities. METHODS: This investigation was part of a larger study that consisted of two protocols with two distinct cohorts of participants who experienced traumatic injury. Participants in both protocols were asked to provide phone, email, text, and mail contact information to complete follow-up surveys assessing patient-reported outcomes six months after injury. To increase follow-up response rates between protocol 1 and protocol 2, the study team modified the contact procedures for the protocol 2 cohort. Frequency distributions were utilized to report the frequency of follow-up response modalities and overall response rates in both protocols. RESULTS: A total of 178 individuals responded to the 6-month follow-up survey: 88 in protocol 1 and 90 in protocol 2. After implementing new follow-up contact procedures in protocol 2 that relied more heavily on the use of automated modalities (e.g., email and text messages), the response rate increased by 17.9 percentage points. The primary response modality shifted from phone (72.7%) in protocol 1 to the combination of email (47.8%) and text (14.4%) in protocol 2. CONCLUSIONS: Results from this investigation suggest that follow-up data can feasibly be collected from trauma patients. Use of automated follow-up methods holds promise to expand longitudinal data in the national trauma registry and broaden the understanding of disparities in patient experiences.
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BACKGROUND: Trauma, including traumatic brain injury (TBI), is the leading cause of nonobstetric maternal mortality during pregnancy. Few data are available regarding the optimal management of pregnant patients with TBI, leading to a lack of dedicated guidelines. We performed an international survey to examine the management of severe TBI in pregnant patients, focusing on monitoring, therapy, and intensive care practices. METHODS: This survey, endorsed by the World Society of Emergency Surgery, was composed of a questionnaire with 79 items divided into four sections: (1) general information (items 1-7), (2) management of the maternal-fetal unit (items 8-43), (3) management of intracranial hypertension (items 44-76), and (4) specific considerations (items 77-79). RESULTS: One hundred and twenty-two physicians from 110 centers in 35 countries responded. The main findings related to TBI care in pregnant patients included the following: (1) a lack of availability of a specific TBI protocol in pregnancy; (2) an increase in the utilization of magnetic resonance imaging as the primary neuroimaging tool; (3) higher hemoglobin thresholds for transfusion; and (4) a lower utilization of therapeutic hypothermia, neuromuscular blocking agents, and barbiturate coma. We also report large variability in the timing of cesarean section in pregnant patients with TBI (≥ 23 weeks of gestation) needing an emergency craniotomy (simultaneously 23% vs. later cesarean section 50.8%). CONCLUSIONS: Great variability in the management of pregnant patients with severe TBI was identified worldwide from the results of our survey. These findings, highlighting the lack of robust evidence on this topic, will be helpful to stimulate future investigations and to promote educational efforts on this difficult scenario.
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This survey study evaluates a program for increasing bystander bleeding control skills, improving self-efficacy for bleeding control, and building trust between community participants and first responders in a Somali community in the US affected by firearm-related deaths.
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OBJECTIVES: We asked how increasing age interacts with transfusion and mortality among older injured adults at our large regional trauma center. BACKGROUND: Older adults are increasing proportions of acute trauma care and transfusion, but the specific interactions of increasing age with blood product use are unclear. METHODS/MATERIALS: Trauma data (age, injury severity, mechanism, etc.) were linked with transfusion service data (type, timing and numbers of units) for all acute trauma patients treated at our center 2011-2022. Subsets of patients aged ≥55 years were identified by age decade and trends assessed statistically, p < 0.01. RESULTS: Of 73 645 patients, 25 409 (34.5%) were aged ≥55. Within increasing 10-year age cohorts, these older patients were increasingly female (32.2%-67.2%), transferred from outside facilities (55.2%-65.9%) and injured in falls (44.4%-90.3%). Overall, patients ≥55, despite roughly equivalent injury severity, were twice as likely to be transfused (24% vs. 12.8%) as younger patients and to die during hospitalisation (7.5% vs. 2.9%). Cohort survival at all ages and levels of transfusion intensity in the first 4 h of care were more than 50%. Through age 94, numbers of red cell and whole blood units given in the first 4 h of care were a function of injury severity, not age cohort. CONCLUSIONS: In our trauma resuscitation practice, patients aged ≥55 years are more likely to receive blood products than younger patients, but numbers of units given in the first 4 h appear based on injury severity. Age equity in acute resuscitation is demonstrated.
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INTRODUCTION: Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) patients should but do not routinely receive professional interpretation. The authors examined provider perceptions of barriers and solutions to interpreter services (IS) in a safety-net hospital to inform quality improvement (QI). METHODS: A 13-item survey was distributed to 750 clinicians representing 10 services across professional roles, including social workers. Closed- and open-ended questions addressed accessing IS, IS value, and care for CALD patients. Respondents ranked eight barriers to routine IS use and provided ideas for improvement. Descriptive statistics characterized survey results in aggregate and by professional role and care team. Quantitative and qualitative results were triangulated for agreement between survey domains and coded free-text response themes. RESULTS: A total of 221 responses were analyzed (29.5% response rate). Cost was the lowest-ranked barrier across roles. Leading barriers were efficiency pressures and cumbersome access. Free-text responses agreed with these findings. CALD patients were perceived to have higher complication risk by 87.5% of social workers but by 56.8% of other roles. Recommendations to increase IS varied by team: streamlined access process (46.2% emergency, 37.8% inpatient respondents), expanded in-person interpretation (55.6% inpatient, 45.8% perioperative respondents), and better equipment (44.4% outpatient, 35.9% emergency, 25.0% perioperative respondents). CONCLUSION: Provider experiences vary by care team and interpretation modality. Interpretation services are cumbersome to access and compete with efficiency pressures, leading to shortcuts that fail to provide adequate language access. Three initial QI efforts resulted: increased video interpretation equipment, a new language access committee, and a new language access leadership role.
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Barreras de Comunicación , Proveedores de Redes de Seguridad , Traducción , Humanos , Proveedores de Redes de Seguridad/organización & administración , Mejoramiento de la Calidad/organización & administración , Actitud del Personal de Salud , Diversidad Cultural , Femenino , Masculino , Rol Profesional , LenguajeRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Firearm injuries cause significant morbidity and mortality. Patients with firearm injuries require urgent/emergency operative procedures but the literature incompletely describes how anesthesia care and outcomes differ between high acuity trauma patients with and without firearm injuries. Our objective was to examine anesthesia care, resource utilization, and outcomes of patients with acute firearm injuries compared to nonfirearm injuries. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study of patients ≥18 years admitted to a regional Level 1 trauma center between 2014 and 2022 who required operative management within the first 2 hours of hospital arrival. We examined clinical characteristics, anesthesiology care practices, and intra- and postoperative outcomes of patients with firearm injuries compared to patients with nonfirearm injuries. RESULTS: Over the 9-year study period, firearm injuries accounted for the largest yearly average increase in trauma admissions (firearm 10.1%, blunt 3.2%, other 1.3%, motor-vehicle crash 0.9%). Emergency anesthesiology care within 2 hours of arrival was delivered to 4.7% of injured patients (2124; 541 firearm [25.4%] and 1583 [74.5%] nonfirearm). Patients with firearm injuries were younger (30 [23-40] years vs 41 [29-56] years; P < .0001), male (90% vs 75%; P < .0001), direct admissions from scene (78% vs 62%; P < .0001), had less polytrauma (10% vs 22%; P < .0001), arrived after hours (73% vs 63%; P < .0001), and received earlier anesthesiology care (0.4 [0.3-0.7] vs 0.9 [0.5-1.5] hours after arrival; P < .0001). Patients with firearm injuries more often received invasive arterial (83% vs 77%; P < .0001) and central venous (14% vs 10%; P = .02) cannulation, blood products (3 [0-11] vs 0 [0-7] units; P < .0001), tranexamic acid (30% vs 22%; P < .001), as well as had higher estimated blood loss (500 [200-1588] mL vs 300 [100-1000] mL; P < .0001), and were transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU) more frequently (83% vs 77%; P < .001) than patients with nonfirearm injuries. Intraoperative mortality was comparable (6% firearm vs 4% nonfirearm) but postoperative mortality was lower for patients with firearm injuries who survived the intraoperative course (6% vs 14%; P < .0001). Comparatively, more patients with firearm injuries were discharged to home, or to jail (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Over the study period, anesthesiologists increasingly cared for patients with firearm injuries, who often present outside of daytime hours and require urgent operative intervention. Operating room readiness and high-intensity resuscitation capacity, such as access to hemostatic control measures, are critical to achieving intraoperative survival and favorable postoperative outcomes, particularly for patients with firearm injuries.
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INTRODUCTION: Diversity in healthcare and research is integral to serving our increasingly diverse population. Access to academic enrichment programs, an important pathway to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers promotes educational attainment through academic preparation and increased interest, useful strategies for improving diverse representation in higher learning. Given this important pathway to STEM fields, attention to equity in enrichment programs admissions is as important as the increasing focus on mitigating racial/ethnic disparities in undergraduate and graduate admissions. Methods: In a retrospective cohort study at the University of Washington, we used descriptive and Chi-Square statistics to compare a hybrid competitive summer application program with stipend with an asynchronous first-come, first-served enrollment program in injury and violence prevention research. The three main outcomes were: 1) time to application, measured by number of days to apply/enroll after application or enrollment period start date, 2) percentage of application/enrollment period, measured by when application or enrollment occurred in relation to the total application or enrollment period, and 3) differences in Black, Hispanic, and Native American applicants and enrollees. Results: In a study examining two injury and violence prevention programs, which reached educational institutions including Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) and Tribal Colleges: 1) Applicants were 9.6% and 6.4% Black (application vs enrollment programs; p<0.0001), 0.4% and 0% Native American to the application and enrollment programs, and 9.1% and 10.3% Hispanic (application vs enrollment programs; p=0.6), 2) Across all racial and ethnic groups, students applied later (last 15% percent of application period) in the competitive application program than to the first-come first-served enrollment program in which students enrolled throughout the enrollment period, and 3) Across both program types, there were racial and ethnic differences in time to application and enrollment start and completion. CONCLUSION: Findings show that free enrollment programs alone do not incentivize educational attainment for all groups and that application rolling admissions processes may not equally promote racial and ethnic diversity for all groups.
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OBJECTIVES: Demand for rapid coagulation testing for massive transfusion events led to development of an emergency hemorrhage panel (EHP; hemoglobin, platelet count, prothrombin time/international normalized ratio, and fibrinogen), with laboratory turnaround time (TAT) of less than 20 minutes. Ten years on, we asked if current laboratory practices were meeting that TAT goal and differences were evident in TAT between the 2 major institutions in our system. METHODS: We identified EHPs ordered at our 2 largest hospitals, February 2, 2021, to July 17, 2022, comparing order to specimen draw time, specimen draw to specimen received time, laboratory analytic time, and total TAT results from emergency department and operating room. Site 1 houses a level I trauma center; site 2 includes tertiary care, transplant, and obstetrics services. RESULTS: In total, 1137 EHPs were recorded in our study period. Laboratory TAT was significantly faster at site 1 (~14 vs ~27 minutes, P < .01). Average laboratory TAT was under 20 minutes at site 1 but only for 50% of specimens at site 2. Outlier specimens were collection delays at site 1 and specimen processing delays at site 2. CONCLUSIONS: The EHP can be performed as rapidly as described. However, compromises in laboratory location, available personnel, and processing differences can degrade performance.
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Hemorragia , Humanos , Factores de Tiempo , Hemorragia/diagnóstico , Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital , Pruebas de Coagulación Sanguínea , Recuento de Plaquetas , Tiempo de ProtrombinaRESUMEN
PURPOSE: Transcranial doppler based diagnostic criteria for cerebral vasospasm are not well established in the pediatric population because there is no published normative data to support the diagnosis. Studies have relied on expert consensus, but the definitions have not been validated in children diagnosed with angiographic evidence of vasospasm. Obtaining normative data is a prerequisite to defining pediatric cerebral vasospasm and the Lindegaard Ratio (LR). In this study, we obtained normative data and calculation of the normal LR from healthy children aged 10-16 years. METHODS: TCD and carotid ultrasonography was used to measure steady state velocities of both the middle cerebral artery (VMCA) and the extracranial internal cerebral artery (VEICA) in healthy children aged 10-16 years. Demographic information, hemodynamic characteristics and the calculated LR (VMCA/VEICA) was determined for each subject using descriptive statistics. RESULTS: Of the 26 healthy children, 13 were male and 13 were female. VMCA ranged between 53 and 93 cm/sec. LR ranged between 1 and 2.2 for the cohort. VMCA for both males and females were within 2 standard deviations (SD) of the normal mean flow velocity. As the VMCA velocities approached 2 SD above the mean, LR did not exceed 2.2. CONCLUSION: Our results help define a threshold for LR which can be used to establish radiographic criteria for cerebral vasospasm in children. Our data suggests that using VMCA criteria alone would overestimate cerebral vasospasm and raises question of whether an LR threshold other than 3 is more appropriate for the cut off between hyperemia versus vasospasm in children.
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Ultrasonografía Doppler Transcraneal , Humanos , Niño , Femenino , Masculino , Adolescente , Ultrasonografía Doppler Transcraneal/métodos , Valores de Referencia , Arteria Cerebral Media/diagnóstico por imagen , Velocidad del Flujo Sanguíneo/fisiología , Vasoespasmo Intracraneal/diagnóstico por imagen , Circulación Cerebrovascular/fisiologíaRESUMEN
Background: to examine factors associated with cardiac evaluation and associations between cardiac test abnormalities and clinical outcomes in patients with acute brain injury (ABI) due to acute ischemic stroke (AIS), spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (sICH), and traumatic brain injury (TBI) requiring neurocritical care. Methods: In a cohort of patients ≥18 years, we examined the utilization of electrocardiography (ECG), beta-natriuretic peptide (BNP), cardiac troponin (cTnI), and transthoracic echocardiography (TTE). We investigated the association between cTnI, BNP, sex-adjusted prolonged QTc interval, low ejection fraction (EF < 40%), all-cause mortality, death by neurologic criteria (DNC), transition to comfort measures only (CMO), and hospital discharge to home using univariable and multivariable analysis (adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance carrier, pre-admission cardiac disorder, ABI type, admission Glasgow Coma Scale Score, mechanical ventilation, and intracranial pressure [ICP] monitoring). Results: The final sample comprised 11,822 patients: AIS (46.7%), sICH (18.5%), SAH (14.8%), and TBI (20.0%). A total of 63% (n = 7472) received cardiac workup, which increased over nine years (p < 0.001). A cardiac investigation was associated with increased age, male sex (aOR 1.16 [1.07, 1.27]), non-white ethnicity (aOR), non-commercial insurance (aOR 1.21 [1.09, 1.33]), pre-admission cardiac disorder (aOR 1.21 [1.09, 1.34]), mechanical ventilation (aOR1.78 [1.57, 2.02]) and ICP monitoring (aOR1.68 [1.49, 1.89]). Compared to AIS, sICH (aOR 0.25 [0.22, 0.29]), SAH (aOR 0.36 [0.30, 0.43]), and TBI (aOR 0.19 [0.17, 0.24]) patients were less likely to receive cardiac investigation. Patients with troponin 25th-50th quartile (aOR 1.65 [1.10-2.47]), troponin 50th-75th quartile (aOR 1.79 [1.22-2.63]), troponin >75th quartile (aOR 2.18 [1.49-3.17]), BNP 50th-75th quartile (aOR 2.86 [1.28-6.40]), BNP >75th quartile (aOR 4.54 [2.09-9.85]), prolonged QTc (aOR 3.41 [2.28; 5.30]), and EF < 40% (aOR 2.47 [1.07; 5.14]) were more likely to be DNC. Patients with troponin 50th-75th quartile (aOR 1.77 [1.14-2.73]), troponin >75th quartile (aOR 1.81 [1.18-2.78]), and prolonged QTc (aOR 1.71 [1.39; 2.12]) were more likely to be associated with a transition to CMO. Patients with prolonged QTc (aOR 0.66 [0.58; 0.76]) were less likely to be discharged home. Conclusions: This large, single-center study demonstrates low rates of cardiac evaluations in TBI, SAH, and sICH compared to AIS. However, there are strong associations between electrocardiography, biomarkers of cardiac injury and heart failure, and echocardiography findings on clinical outcomes in patients with ABI. Findings need validation in a multicenter cohort.
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BACKGROUND: Acupuncture is a promising treatment for common symptoms after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Our objectives were to explore knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about acupuncture, identify health service needs and assess the perceived feasibility of weekly acupuncture visits among individuals with TBI. METHODS: We surveyed adults 18 years of age and older with TBI who received care at the University of Washington. Respondents were asked to complete 143 questions regarding acupuncture knowledge, attitudes and beliefs, injury-related symptoms and comorbidities, and to describe their interest in weekly acupuncture. RESULTS: Respondents (n = 136) reported a high degree of knowledge about acupuncture as a component of Traditional Chinese Medicine, needle use and safety, but were less knowledgeable regarding that the fact that most conditions require multiple acupuncture treatments to achieve optimal therapeutic benefit. Respondents were comfortable talking with healthcare providers about acupuncture (63.4%), open to acupuncture concurrent with conventional treatments (80.6%) and identified lack of insurance coverage as a barrier (50.8%). Beliefs varied, but respondents were generally receptive to using acupuncture as therapy. Unsurprisingly, respondents with a history of acupuncture (n = 60) had more acupuncture knowledge than those without such a history (n = 66) and were more likely to pursue acupuncture without insurance (60%), for serious health conditions (63.3%) or alongside conventional medical therapy (85.0%). Half of all respondents expressed interest in participating in weekly acupuncture for up to 12 months and would expect almost a 50% improvement in symptoms by participating. CONCLUSION: Adults with TBI were receptive and interested in participating in weekly acupuncture to address health concerns. These results provide support for exploring the integration of acupuncture into the care of individuals with TBI.
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Terapia por Acupuntura , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Humanos , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/terapia , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/psicología , Femenino , Masculino , Adulto , Persona de Mediana Edad , Estudios Transversales , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Anciano , Adulto Joven , Necesidades y Demandas de Servicios de SaludRESUMEN
Background: Incorporating post-discharge data into trauma registries would allow for better research on patient outcomes, including disparities in outcomes. This pilot study tested a follow-up data collection process to be incorporated into existing trauma care systems, prioritizing low-cost automated response modalities. Methods: This investigation was part of a larger study that consisted of two protocols with two distinct cohorts of participants who experienced traumatic injury. Participants in both protocols were asked to provide phone, email, text, and mail contact information to complete follow-up surveys assessing patient-reported outcomes six months after injury. To increase follow-up response rates between protocol 1 and protocol 2, the study team modified the contact procedures for the protocol 2 cohort. Frequency distributions were utilized to report the frequency of follow-up response modalities and overall response rates in both protocols. Results: A total of 178 individuals responded to the 6-month follow-up survey: 88 in protocol 1 and 90 in protocol 2. After implementing new follow-up contact procedures in protocol 2 that relied more heavily on the use of automated modalities (e.g., email and text messages), the response rate increased by 17.9 percentage points. The primary response modality shifted from phone (72.7%) in protocol 1 to the combination of email (47.8%) and text (14.4%) in protocol 2. Conclusions: Results from this investigation suggest that follow-up data can feasibly be collected from trauma patients. Use of automated follow-up methods holds promise to expand longitudinal data in the national trauma registry and broaden the understanding of disparities in patient experiences.
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Background: Limited availability and poor quality of data in medical records and trauma registries impede progress to achieve injury-related health equity across the lifespan. Methods: We used a Nominal Group Technique (NGT) in-person workgroup and a national web-based Delphi process to identify common data elements (CDE) that should be collected. Results: The 12 participants in the NGT workgroup and 23 participants in the national Delphi process identified 10 equity-related CDE and guiding lessons for research on collection of these data. Conclusions: These high-priority CDE define a detailed, equity-oriented approach to guide research to achieve injury-related health equity across the lifespan.
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BACKGROUND: School Resource Officer (SRO) programs do not reduce school violence and increase school discipline. We describe the use of a culturally responsive framework to form a school community collaborative among students, parents, staff, administrators, and law enforcement to reform an SRO program, promote school safety, and reduce punitive measures. METHODS: Members of a participating school district, a local county, and a university collaborated. Adapting an identified culturally responsive model, a racially/ethnically diverse school community co-developed and implemented a School Community Collaborative (SCC) to address a school safety priority (SRO program reform). The main outcomes were SCC model development and implementation, policy change, and school community feedback. RESULTS: Sixteen community members participated in the 5-week SCC with students, staff, law enforcement, and parents. The SCC revised the district's SRO memorandum of understanding (MOU) with law enforcement. Participants reported favorable feedback, and 89% reported the inclusion of diverse voices. CONCLUSIONS: Co-development and implementation of an SCC process with schools were feasible. School SCC participated in a community-engaged evaluation and revision of an MOU.
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Instituciones Académicas , Humanos , Instituciones Académicas/organización & administración , Seguridad , Aplicación de la Ley , Conducta Cooperativa , Estudiantes , Relaciones Comunidad-Institución , Violencia/prevención & control , Desarrollo de Programa , Niño , Masculino , Femenino , Participación de la Comunidad/métodosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: There is limited evidence that beta-blockers may provide benefit for patients with moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) during the acute injury period. Larger studies on utilization patterns and impact on outcomes in clinical practice are lacking. OBJECTIVE: The present study uses a large, national hospital claims-based dataset to examine early beta-blocker utilization patterns and its association with clinical outcomes among critically ill patients with moderate-severe TBI. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of the administrative claims Premier Healthcare Database of adults (≥17 years) with moderate-severe TBI admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) from 2016 to 2020. The exposure was receipt of a beta-blocker during day 1 or 2 of ICU stay (BB+). The primary outcome was hospital mortality, and secondary outcomes were: hospital length of stay (LOS), ICU LOS, discharge to home, and vasopressor utilization. In a sensitivity analysis, we explored the association of beta-blocker class (cardioselective and noncardioselective) with hospital mortality. We used propensity weighting methods to address possible confounding by treatment indication. RESULTS: A total of 109â 665 participants met inclusion criteria and 39% (n = 42â 489) were exposed to beta-blockers during the first 2 days of hospitalization. Of those, 42% received cardioselective only, 43% received noncardioselective only, and 14% received both. After adjustment, there was no association with hospital mortality in the BB+ group compared to the BB- group (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 0.99, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.94, 1.04). The BB+ group had longer hospital stays, lower chance of discharged home, and lower risk of vasopressor utilization, although these difference were clinically small. Beta-blocker class was not associated with hospital mortality. CONCLUSION: In this retrospective cohort study, we found variation in use of beta-blockers and early exposure was not associated with hospital mortality. Further research is necessary to understand the optimal type, dose, and timing of beta-blockers for this population.
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Antagonistas Adrenérgicos beta , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo , Enfermedad Crítica , Mortalidad Hospitalaria , Unidades de Cuidados Intensivos , Tiempo de Internación , Humanos , Antagonistas Adrenérgicos beta/uso terapéutico , Estudios Retrospectivos , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/mortalidad , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/tratamiento farmacológico , Masculino , Femenino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Enfermedad Crítica/mortalidad , Tiempo de Internación/estadística & datos numéricos , Adulto , Unidades de Cuidados Intensivos/estadística & datos numéricos , Anciano , Puntaje de PropensiónRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of pediatric mortality, with a disproportionate burden on low- and middle-income countries. The impact of concomitant extracranial injury (ECI) on these patients remains unclear. This study is the first to characterize the epidemiology and clinical course of severe pediatric TBI with extracranial injuries in any South American country. METHODS: We conducted a secondary analysis of baseline data collected prior to implementation of a clinical trial on TBI care in Argentina, Paraguay, and Chile from September 2019 to July 2020. Patients ≤18 years with CT evidence of TBI, and a Glasgow coma scale (GCS) score ≤8 were recruited. Patients were initially stratified by highest non-head abbreviated injury scale (AIS): isolated TBI (AIS=0), minor extracranial injury (MEI; AIS=1-2), and serious extracranial injury (SEI; AIS≥3). Patients were subsequently stratified by mechanism of injury. Intergroup differences were compared using ANOVA, two-tailed unpaired t-tests, and chi-square tests. RESULTS: Among the 116 children included, 33 % (n = 38) had an isolated TBI, 34 % (n = 39) had MEI, and 34 % (n = 39) had SEI. Facial (n = 53), thoracic (n = 44), and abdominal (n = 31) injuries were the most common ECIs. At discharge, there were no significant differences in median GCS, GOS, or GOS-extended between groups. Patients with SEI had a longer hospital LOS than those with isolated TBI (median 28.0 (IQR 10.6-40.1) vs 11.9 (IQR 8.7-20.7) days, p = 0.013). The most common mechanisms of injury were road traffic injuries (RTIs) (n = 50, 43 %) and falls (n = 35, 30 %). Patients with RTI-associated TBIs were more likely to be older (median 11.0 (IQR 3.0-14.0) vs 2.0 (IQR 0.8-7.0) years, p<0.001) and more likely to have an ECI (86% vs 54 %, respectively; p = 0.003). ICU and Hospital LOS for RTI patients (median 10.5 (IQR 6.1-21.1) and 24.1 (IQR 11.5-40.4) days) were longer than those of fall patients (median 6.1 (IQR 2.6-8.9) and 13.7 (IQR 7.7-24.5) days). CONCLUSIONS: Extracranial injuries are common in South American patients with severe TBI. Severe ECI is more frequently associated with RTIs and can result in a higher rate of surgical procedures and LOS. Further strategies are needed to characterize the prevention and treatment of severe pediatric TBI in the South American context.