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Outcome of patients with haemorrhagic shock: an indicator of performance in a trauma centre
Authors:DA Hill  RH West  S Roncal
Affiliation:Department of Surgery, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, Australia.
Abstract:The survival rate of patients admitted to the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (RPAH) from the central Sydney area with a major injury has improved since regionalization of trauma services in early 1992. This improvement has been attributed to education, better hospital care and changing trauma epidemiology. This study was conducted to assess whether the outcome of patients admitted with haemorrhagic shock had improved. This is proposed as a more subtle indicator of hospital performance than overall survival rates. A prospective before and after study was carried out comparing outcome in the 18 months preceding 1 January 1992 with that in the subsequent 18 months. Entry criteria to the study included all primary retrievals from the central Sydney area to RPAH with injury severity scores (ISS) > 15. Outcomes were compared generally and in those who were in a state of haemorrhagic shock (systolic blood pressure < or = 90 mmHg) on arrival at the emergency department. Three hundred and eight patients were entered into the study. Stratification showed similar numbers, demographic features and mechanisms of injury in the two groups. Forty patients were in a state of haemorrhagic shock on admission. The overall mortality was reduced from 31% to 11% (P < 0.001) over the two phases of the study. The mortality from blood loss in the 40 shocked patients fell from 10/25 in the first period to 2/15 (P = 0.07) in the latter. These improved survival rates were felt to reflect the value of the educational and organizational initiatives introduced following designation of the hospital as a trauma centre.
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