Are casualties from mass-casualty Motor Vehicle Crashes different from casualties of other Motor Vehicle Crashes?
Autor: | Alexander Becker, I. Grevtsev, N. Abbod, Michael D. Stein, Gad Shaked, Ofer Merin, Igor Jeroukhimov, A. Schwartz, A. Braslavsky, M. Weiss, Adi Givon, Kobi Peleg, Yoram Klein, M. Ben Eli, Boris Kessel, Avraham I. Rivkind, Hany Bahouth, Y. Mnouskin, M. Karawani, Moran Bodas, Guy Lin, Dror Soffer, Miklosh Bala |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Population Transportation 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Intensive care medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Safety Risk Reliability and Quality education education.field_of_study business.industry Health Policy Mortality rate Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health 030208 emergency & critical care medicine Retrospective cohort study Mass Casualty Pollution Mass-casualty incident Emergency medicine Body region business human activities Safety Research Motor vehicle crash |
Zdroj: | Journal of Transport & Health. 19:100928 |
ISSN: | 2214-1405 |
Popis: | Introduction Mass Casualty Incidents (MCI) by Motor Vehicle Crashes (MVCs) are most common type of MCIs. Casualties from MCIs usually require more hospitalization resources. The purpose of this study was to compare the injury characteristics, survivability, and medical resource utilization of casualties from Mass-Casualty Motor Vehicle Crashes (MC-MVCs) and casualties from other (non MCI) MVCs. Methods This retrospective cohort study examined a population of 50,321 Israeli casualties hospitalized due to MVCs between 1998 and 2017, of which 595 (1.2%) were admitted from a MC-MVC. Analysis included type of motor vehicle involved and collision circumstances, injury characteristics, hospital resource utilization, and demographics. Results The results suggest that most casualties from MC-MVCs were bus passengers who were injured when the vehicle rolled over. Injuries from MC-MVCs were more urgent as almost two times more MC-MVCs casualties were rushed directly from the emergency room into the operating rooms and intensive care units than casualties of regular MVCs. Mortality rate was higher in MC-MVCs compared to regular MVCs (2.69% compared to 1.46%, respectively; p = .013). Severe injuries (ISS≥16) were more frequent in MC-MVCs (23.40% versus 15.53%, p Conclusions This study demonstrates that hospitals receiving casualties from MC-MVCs should expect not only a multitude of casualties, rather also the need to treat more urgent and severe injuries, in more body regions per casualty, and expect higher admissions rates to intensive care units and operation rooms under MCI conditions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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