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The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study

Background and Objectives: While trauma is currently the second leading cause of death in Saudi Arabia, little statistical information is available about injury rates and related patient outcomes. There is a need to understand trauma epidemiology to determine strategies that can be put in place to p...

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Main Author: Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
Other Authors: wallis, Lee
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
author2 wallis, Lee
author_browse Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
wallis, Lee
author_facet wallis, Lee
Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
author_sort Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
collection Thesis
description Background and Objectives: While trauma is currently the second leading cause of death in Saudi Arabia, little statistical information is available about injury rates and related patient outcomes. There is a need to understand trauma epidemiology to determine strategies that can be put in place to prevent and treat such trauma. We aimed to describe trauma rates, types of injuries, demographic distribution of injury and body regions affected by trauma in King Fahad Hospital in the city of Medina. Methods: The study was undertaken in King Fahad Hospital, the first multi-speciality reference hospital in the Medina region and the only trauma centre in the city. We collected retrospective data on all the trauma victims who visited the Emergency Department from 1st January to 31st December 2018. Simple descriptive statistics were calculated. Trauma mortality was compared with trauma scores with Receiver Operator Curves. Results: During the study period, 8793 patients were evaluated, 5846 (66.5%) males. The mean age was 27.5 years. 5608 (64%) were admitted in one of the in-hospital departments and rest were referred to OPD. Traffic-related injuries (4086; 46.5%) and falls (2993; 34%) were the most common causes of injury. Extremities injury (5929; 67.5%) was recorded as the most common body part. From the in-hospital patients, 5077 (90.5%) were discharged home and 167 (3%) died. Considering the mortality prediction accuracy of RTS and NTS. The RTS score of ≤9 had sensitivity and specificity of 90.2% and 90.4%, respectively, in predicting mortality in >5-year-old patients. NTS score of ≤13 had 90% sensitivity and 97.3% specificity in predicting mortality in the age group of 0-5 year-old. Conclusion: This descriptive study is a crucial step in addressing the burden of trauma in Saudi Arabia. Information related to the characteristics of injuries and relevant patient 2 outcomes may assist in further research into possible causal factors. It may contribute to the creation of new protocols in preventing and managing injuries more efficiently.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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publisherStr Division of Emergency Medicine
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32911 The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study Patel, Mohammed Aasfi wallis, Lee Emergency Medicine Background and Objectives: While trauma is currently the second leading cause of death in Saudi Arabia, little statistical information is available about injury rates and related patient outcomes. There is a need to understand trauma epidemiology to determine strategies that can be put in place to prevent and treat such trauma. We aimed to describe trauma rates, types of injuries, demographic distribution of injury and body regions affected by trauma in King Fahad Hospital in the city of Medina. Methods: The study was undertaken in King Fahad Hospital, the first multi-speciality reference hospital in the Medina region and the only trauma centre in the city. We collected retrospective data on all the trauma victims who visited the Emergency Department from 1st January to 31st December 2018. Simple descriptive statistics were calculated. Trauma mortality was compared with trauma scores with Receiver Operator Curves. Results: During the study period, 8793 patients were evaluated, 5846 (66.5%) males. The mean age was 27.5 years. 5608 (64%) were admitted in one of the in-hospital departments and rest were referred to OPD. Traffic-related injuries (4086; 46.5%) and falls (2993; 34%) were the most common causes of injury. Extremities injury (5929; 67.5%) was recorded as the most common body part. From the in-hospital patients, 5077 (90.5%) were discharged home and 167 (3%) died. Considering the mortality prediction accuracy of RTS and NTS. The RTS score of ≤9 had sensitivity and specificity of 90.2% and 90.4%, respectively, in predicting mortality in >5-year-old patients. NTS score of ≤13 had 90% sensitivity and 97.3% specificity in predicting mortality in the age group of 0-5 year-old. Conclusion: This descriptive study is a crucial step in addressing the burden of trauma in Saudi Arabia. Information related to the characteristics of injuries and relevant patient 2 outcomes may assist in further research into possible causal factors. It may contribute to the creation of new protocols in preventing and managing injuries more efficiently. 2021-02-20T20:06:07Z 2021-02-20T20:06:07Z 2020 2021-02-20T20:05:39Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32911 eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Patel, Mohammed Aasfi
The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
title_full The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
title_fullStr The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
title_full_unstemmed The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
title_short The burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the Western Province of Saudi Arabia – a descriptive study
title_sort burden of trauma in a regional trauma centre in the western province of saudi arabia a descriptive study
topic Emergency Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32911
work_keys_str_mv AT patelmohammedaasfi theburdenoftraumainaregionaltraumacentreinthewesternprovinceofsaudiarabiaadescriptivestudy
AT patelmohammedaasfi burdenoftraumainaregionaltraumacentreinthewesternprovinceofsaudiarabiaadescriptivestudy