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Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups

BACKGROUND: Pre-hospital trauma is complex and challenging, with limited clinical exposure for clinicians. In addition, there is no standardised definition for major trauma, and retrospective scores commonly quantify injury severity, such as the injury severity score. This qualitative study aimed to...

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Autores principales: Thompson, Lee, Hill, Michael, McMeekin, Peter, Shaw, Gary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The College of Paramedics 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783918/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33447147
http://dx.doi.org/10.29045/14784726.2019.12.4.3.16
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author Thompson, Lee
Hill, Michael
McMeekin, Peter
Shaw, Gary
author_facet Thompson, Lee
Hill, Michael
McMeekin, Peter
Shaw, Gary
author_sort Thompson, Lee
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pre-hospital trauma is complex and challenging, with limited clinical exposure for clinicians. In addition, there is no standardised definition for major trauma, and retrospective scores commonly quantify injury severity, such as the injury severity score. This qualitative study aimed to explore the pre-hospital perspectives of major trauma and how pre-hospital trauma care providers define major trauma. METHOD: Three focus groups of 40–60 minutes’ duration were conducted with paramedics, ambulance technicians, police, firefighters and emergency dispatchers. Digital recordings were transcribed verbatim, coded and reviewed to identify emerging themes. Constant comparison was undertaken throughout and codes were identified for qualitative thematic analysis. RESULTS: Three overarching themes emerged: clinician factors, patient factors and situational factors. Clinician factors highlighted issues of experience and exposure (or lack of) to major trauma and its relationship to clinical concern, communication issues and the complex nature of pre-hospital trauma. Patient factors identified deranged physiology, actual injuries, life changing trauma, potential need for surgical intervention and rehabilitation as defining major trauma. These variables are often complicated by the extremities of age as well as previous medical history and medications. The situational factors identified that every traumatic encounter is unique, requiring bespoke management where high and low energy mechanisms of injury should be considered. CONCLUSION: Based on the analysis of the focus groups, a working pre-hospital definition is: Any injury (or injuries) that have the potential to be life-threatening or life-changing, including those sustained from low energy mechanisms in people rendered vulnerable by extremes of age, comorbidities or frailty, resulting in significant physiological compromise (haemodynamic instability, reduced consciousness, respiratory compromise) and/or significant anatomical abnormality that may require immediate intervention.
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spelling pubmed-77839182021-01-13 Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups Thompson, Lee Hill, Michael McMeekin, Peter Shaw, Gary Br Paramed J Original Research BACKGROUND: Pre-hospital trauma is complex and challenging, with limited clinical exposure for clinicians. In addition, there is no standardised definition for major trauma, and retrospective scores commonly quantify injury severity, such as the injury severity score. This qualitative study aimed to explore the pre-hospital perspectives of major trauma and how pre-hospital trauma care providers define major trauma. METHOD: Three focus groups of 40–60 minutes’ duration were conducted with paramedics, ambulance technicians, police, firefighters and emergency dispatchers. Digital recordings were transcribed verbatim, coded and reviewed to identify emerging themes. Constant comparison was undertaken throughout and codes were identified for qualitative thematic analysis. RESULTS: Three overarching themes emerged: clinician factors, patient factors and situational factors. Clinician factors highlighted issues of experience and exposure (or lack of) to major trauma and its relationship to clinical concern, communication issues and the complex nature of pre-hospital trauma. Patient factors identified deranged physiology, actual injuries, life changing trauma, potential need for surgical intervention and rehabilitation as defining major trauma. These variables are often complicated by the extremities of age as well as previous medical history and medications. The situational factors identified that every traumatic encounter is unique, requiring bespoke management where high and low energy mechanisms of injury should be considered. CONCLUSION: Based on the analysis of the focus groups, a working pre-hospital definition is: Any injury (or injuries) that have the potential to be life-threatening or life-changing, including those sustained from low energy mechanisms in people rendered vulnerable by extremes of age, comorbidities or frailty, resulting in significant physiological compromise (haemodynamic instability, reduced consciousness, respiratory compromise) and/or significant anatomical abnormality that may require immediate intervention. The College of Paramedics 2019-12-01 2019-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7783918/ /pubmed/33447147 http://dx.doi.org/10.29045/14784726.2019.12.4.3.16 Text en © 2019 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Thompson, Lee
Hill, Michael
McMeekin, Peter
Shaw, Gary
Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title_full Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title_fullStr Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title_full_unstemmed Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title_short Defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
title_sort defining major trauma: a pre-hospital perspective using focus groups
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783918/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33447147
http://dx.doi.org/10.29045/14784726.2019.12.4.3.16
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