Analysis and Incidence Calculation of Snowmobile Injuries Identified in a Rural Wisconsin Health Care System Over Five Years.

Q3 Medicine
Wisconsin Medical Journal Pub Date : 2022-12-01
Jennifer P King, Oluwatosin Olaiya, Daniel C Cullinane
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Current estimates of snowmobile-related injuries are largely based on inpatient data from trauma centers. These centers care for severely injured patients and may not capture treatment information and outcomes for minor snowmobile-related injuries, therefore underestimating their volume and overestimating patient acuity.

Methods: Medically attended snowmobile injuries were identified retrospectively from inpatient and outpatient records from a health system in north-central Wisconsin using a hierarchical method of International Classification of Diseases external cause codes and text searches for key words. Manual reviews of the medical record collected information on patient characteristics, accident details, and clinical information. Descriptive analyses, comparisons between hospital admitted and nonadmitted cases, and calculations of seasonal incidence rates were conducted.

Results: From November 1, 2013, through April 30, 2018, there were 1013 snowmobile-related injuries, with 264 (26%) cases hospitalized and 749 (74%) treated as outpatients. Text search alone identified 61% of all incidents and about a quarter (26%) of hospitalized incidents. Inpatients were older and a higher percentage wore helmets, sustained multisystem trauma, sustained more fractures, more organ injuries, and had higher need surgery and intensive care. Mortality was 1%. The average annual injury incidence rate was 313 per 100,000 snowmobiles registered.

Conclusions: Currently available studies of snowmobile-related injuries have underestimated their number and burden. Studies combining datasets from health systems in the state and statewide mortality records for cases who died prior to care could elucidate the full statewide impact of snowmobile-related injuries in Wisconsin, leading to better assessment of prevention efforts and staffing in rural trauma systems.

威斯康星州农村医疗保健系统五年来雪地摩托伤害的分析和发生率计算。
背景:目前对雪地摩托相关伤害的估计主要基于创伤中心的住院患者数据。这些中心照顾严重受伤的患者,可能无法捕捉到与雪地摩托相关的轻微伤害的治疗信息和结果,因此低估了它们的数量,高估了患者的敏锐度。方法:采用国际疾病分类外因代码和关键词文本搜索的分层方法,回顾性地从威斯康星州中北部卫生系统的住院和门诊记录中识别医疗救护的雪地摩托伤害。手动审查病历收集的有关患者特征、事故详细信息和临床信息的信息。描述性分析,住院和非住院病例之间的比较,并计算季节性发病率。结果:2013年11月1日至2018年4月30日,共发生1013例雪地摩托相关伤害,住院264例(26%),门诊749例(74%)。仅文字搜索就能识别61%的事件和大约四分之一(26%)的住院事件。住院患者年龄较大,戴头盔的比例较高,持续多系统创伤,持续骨折,更多器官损伤,需要更高的手术和重症监护。死亡率为1%。年平均伤害发生率为每10万辆注册雪地车中有313人受伤。结论:目前对雪地摩托相关伤害的研究低估了它们的数量和负担。结合来自州卫生系统的数据集和全州范围内在治疗前死亡病例的死亡率记录的研究,可以阐明威斯康星州雪地摩托相关伤害在全州范围内的全部影响,从而更好地评估农村创伤系统的预防工作和人员配备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Wisconsin Medical Journal
Wisconsin Medical Journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
72
期刊介绍: The Wisconsin Medical Society is the largest association of medical doctors in the state with more than 12,000 members dedicated to the best interests of their patients. With that in mind, wisconsinmedicalsociety.org offers patients a unique source for reliable, physician-reviewed medical information. The Wisconsin Medical Society has been a trusted source for health policy leadership since 1841.
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