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Geographic Disparities in Re-triage Destinations Among Seriously Injured Californians. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to measure geographic differences in the inappropriate transfer (sub-optimal re-triage) of seriously injured patients in California.
  • The research found that from 2009 to 2018, 30.2% of the seriously injured patients re-triaged (2,680 out of 8,882) were sent to low-level centers instead of high-level trauma centers, with rates increasing over the years.
  • Results showed that areas with higher population density had more instances of sub-optimal re-triage, and certain regions, particularly the Southwest RTCC, accounted for a significant share of these cases.

Article Abstract

Objective: quantify geographic disparities in sub-optimal re-triage of seriously injured patients in California.

Summary Of Background Data: Re-triage is the emergent transfer of seriously injured patients from the emergency departments of non-trauma and low-level trauma centers to, ideally, high-level trauma centers. Some patients are re-triaged to a second non-trauma or low-level trauma center (sub-optimal) instead of a high-level trauma center (optimal).

Methods: This was a retrospective observational cohort study of seriously injured patients, defined by an Injury Severity Score > 15, re-triaged in California (2009-2018). Re-triages within one day of presentation to the sending center were considered. The sub-optimal re-triage rate was quantified at the state, regional trauma coordinating committees (RTCC), local emergency medical service agencies, and sending center level. A generalized linear mixed-effects regression quantified the association of sub-optimality with the RTCC of the sending center. Geospatial analyses demonstrated geographic variations in sub-optimal re-triage rates and calculated alternative re-triage destinations.

Results: There were 8,882 re-triages of seriously injured patients and 2,680 (30.2 %) were sub-optimal. Sub-optimally re-triaged patients had 1.5 higher odds of transfer to a third short-term acute care hospital and 1.25 increased odds of re-admission within 60 days from discharge. The sub-optimal re-triage rates increased from 29.3 % in 2009 to 38.6 % in 2018. 56.0 % of non-trauma and low-level trauma centers had at least one sub-optimal re-triage. The Southwest RTCC accounted for the largest proportion (39.8 %) of all sub-optimal re-triages in California.

Conclusion: High population density geographic areas experienced higher sub-optimal re-triage rates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10348777PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/as9.0000000000000270DOI Listing

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