Original contributionThe impact of injury severity and prehospital procedures on scene time in victims of major trauma
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Cited by (82)
Disparity in prehospital scene time for geriatric trauma patients
2022, American Journal of SurgeryEfficacy of the presence of an emergency physician in prehospital major trauma care: Randomised control trial results are needed!
2020, American Journal of Emergency MedicineEfficacy of the presence of an emergency physician in prehospital major trauma care: A nationwide cohort study in Japan
2019, American Journal of Emergency MedicineCitation Excerpt :The current study found that prehospital time was significantly prolonged in the physician group compared to the non-physician group. This finding is controversial, possibly due to differences in study design, emergency medical systems, number of hospitals, and the country size between previous studies [4,12,17], nevertheless delayed hospital arrival was one of the reasons for the failure of the presence of a prehospital physician to improve outcome. We evaluated not only prehospital time but also time to CT scan for diagnosis and time to blood transfusion and surgery for treatment.
Does the presence of an emergency physician influence pre-hospital time, pre-hospital interventions and the mortality of severely injured patients? A matched-pair analysis based on the trauma registry of the German Trauma Society (TraumaRegister DGU<sup>®</sup>)
2017, InjuryCitation Excerpt :Spaite et al., for example, calculated a mean on-scene time of 8.1 min in an urban setting (Tucson) in the United States. Other on-scene times were reported by McCoy et al. (13 min for patients with blunt trauma and 11 min for patients with penetrating trauma) in Orange, California, and by Ball et al. (12 min) in Atlanta, Georgia [5,11,36]. These considerably shorter on-scene times in US studies may be attributable to the use of the “scoop and run” approach.
Early Predictors of Functional Outcome After Trauma
2016, PM and R
Presented at the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Annual Meeting in San Diego, California, May 1989.