非二元创伤患者:划定弱势高危人群。

Amanda Hambrecht, M. Schellenberg, Natthida Owattanapanich, Kelly A Boyle, Chaiss Ugarte, Corey Ambrose, K. Matsushima, Matthew J Martin, Kenji Inaba
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言 越来越多的人口认同非二元身份。与男性或女性相比,这一边缘化群体可能面临不同的创伤风险,但目前尚未在全国范围内对非二元患者的身体创伤进行研究。将非二元患者的人口统计学特征、损伤特征和创伤后的结果与男性和女性进行了比较。结果共纳入 1,012,348 名患者:其中非二元患者 283 人(<1%),男性患者 610,904 人(60%),女性患者 403,161 人(40%)。非二元患者比男性或女性更年轻(中位年龄分别为 44 岁 vs 49 岁 vs 67 岁,P < .001),而且不太可能是白人种族/族裔(58% vs 60% vs 74%,P < .001)。尽管非二元患者的受伤严重程度评分中位数较低(5 vs 9 vs 9,P < .001),但非二元患者和男性患者的死亡率却高于女性(5% vs 5% vs 3%,P < .001)。尽管受伤严重程度较低,但非二元患者的死亡率与男性相当,高于女性。这些差异表明,非二元创伤患者在性别和种族/族裔方面被双重边缘化,他们在创伤后的治疗效果比根据受伤严重程度预期的要差。这一弱势患者群体值得进一步研究,以确定需要改进的创伤护理领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Non-Binary Trauma Patients: Delineating a Vulnerable, At-Risk Population.
INTRODUCTION An increasing proportion of the population identifies as non-binary. This marginalized group may be at differential risk for trauma compared to those who identify as male or female, but physical trauma among non-binary patients has not yet been examined at a national level. METHODS All patients aged ≥ 16 years in the National Trauma Data Bank were included (2021-2022). Demographics, injury characteristics, and outcomes after trauma among non-binary patients were compared to males and females. The goal was to delineate differences between groups to inform the care and future study of non-binary trauma patients. RESULTS In total, 1,012,348 patients were included: 283 (<1%) non-binary, 610,904 (60%) male, and 403,161 (40%) female patients. Non-binary patients were younger than males or females (median age 44 vs 49 vs 67 years, P < .001) and less likely to be White race/ethnicity (58% vs 60% vs 74%, P < .001). Despite non-binary patients having a lower median Injury Severity Score (5 vs 9 vs 9, P < .001), mortality was highest among non-binary and male patients than females (5% vs 5% vs 3%, P < .001). DISCUSSION In this study, non-binary trauma patients were younger and more likely minority races/ethnicities than males or females. Despite having a lower injury severity, non-binary patient mortality rates were comparable to those of males and greater than for females. These disparities identify non-binary trauma patients as doubly marginalized, by gender and race/ethnicity, who experience worse outcomes after trauma than expected based on injury severity. This vulnerable patient population deserves further study to identify areas for improved trauma delivery care.
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