Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India

Introduction: Prehospital notification of injured patients enables prompt and timely care in hospital through adequate preparation of trauma teams, space, equipment and consumables necessary for resuscitation, and may improve outcomes. In India, anecdotal reports suggest that prehospital notificatio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mitra, Biswadev, Mathew, Joseph, Gupta, Amit, Cameron, Peter, O'Reilly, Gerard, Soni, Kapil Dev, Kaushik, Gaurav, Howard, Teresa, Fahey, Madonna, Stephenson, Michael, Kumar, Vineet, Vyas, Sharad, Dharap, Satish, Patel, Pankaj, Thakor, Advait, Sharma, Naveen, Walker, Tony, Misra, Mahesh Chandra, Gruen, Russell, Fitzgerald, Mark
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107559
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/45364
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-107559
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1075592020-11-01T05:23:30Z Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India Mitra, Biswadev Mathew, Joseph Gupta, Amit Cameron, Peter O'Reilly, Gerard Soni, Kapil Dev Kaushik, Gaurav Howard, Teresa Fahey, Madonna Stephenson, Michael Kumar, Vineet Vyas, Sharad Dharap, Satish Patel, Pankaj Thakor, Advait Sharma, Naveen Walker, Tony Misra, Mahesh Chandra Gruen, Russell Fitzgerald, Mark Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Department of Surgery Accident and Emergency Medicine Ambulance Introduction: Prehospital notification of injured patients enables prompt and timely care in hospital through adequate preparation of trauma teams, space, equipment and consumables necessary for resuscitation, and may improve outcomes. In India, anecdotal reports suggest that prehospital notification, in those few places where it occurs, is unstructured and not linked to a well-defined hospital response. The aim of this manuscript is to describe, in detail, a study protocol for the evaluation of a formalised approach to prehospital notification. Methods and analysis: This is a longitudinal prospective cohort study of injured patients being transported by ambulance to major trauma centres in India. In the preintervention phase, prospective data on patients will be collected on prehospital assessment, notification, inhospital assessment, management and outcomes and recorded in a new tailored multihospital trauma registry. All injured patients arriving by ambulance and allocated to a red or yellow priority category will be eligible for inclusion. The intervention will be a prehospital notification application to be used by ambulance clinicians to notify emergency departments of the impending arrival of a patient. The proportion of eligible patients arriving to hospital after notification will be the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcomes evaluated will be availability of a trauma cubicle, presence of a trauma team on patient arrival, time to first chest X-ray and inhospital mortality. Progress: Ethical approval has been obtained from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi and site-specific approval granted by relevant trauma services. The trial has also been registered with the Monash University Human Research and Ethics Committee; Project number: CF16/1814 – 2016000929. Results will be fed back to prehospital and hospital clinicians via a series of reports and presentations. These will be used to facilitate discussions about service redesign and implementation. It is expected that evidence for improved outcomes will enable widespread adoption of this intervention among centres in all settings with less established tools for prehospital assessment and notification. Published version 2018-07-30T04:45:51Z 2019-12-06T22:34:04Z 2018-07-30T04:45:51Z 2019-12-06T22:34:04Z 2017 Journal Article Mitra, B., Mathew, J., Gupta, A., Cameron, P., O'Reilly, G., Soni, K. D., et al. (2017). Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India. BMJ Open, 7(7), e014073-. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107559 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/45364 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014073 en BMJ Open © 2017 The Author(s). All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ 7 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Accident and Emergency Medicine
Ambulance
spellingShingle Accident and Emergency Medicine
Ambulance
Mitra, Biswadev
Mathew, Joseph
Gupta, Amit
Cameron, Peter
O'Reilly, Gerard
Soni, Kapil Dev
Kaushik, Gaurav
Howard, Teresa
Fahey, Madonna
Stephenson, Michael
Kumar, Vineet
Vyas, Sharad
Dharap, Satish
Patel, Pankaj
Thakor, Advait
Sharma, Naveen
Walker, Tony
Misra, Mahesh Chandra
Gruen, Russell
Fitzgerald, Mark
Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
description Introduction: Prehospital notification of injured patients enables prompt and timely care in hospital through adequate preparation of trauma teams, space, equipment and consumables necessary for resuscitation, and may improve outcomes. In India, anecdotal reports suggest that prehospital notification, in those few places where it occurs, is unstructured and not linked to a well-defined hospital response. The aim of this manuscript is to describe, in detail, a study protocol for the evaluation of a formalised approach to prehospital notification. Methods and analysis: This is a longitudinal prospective cohort study of injured patients being transported by ambulance to major trauma centres in India. In the preintervention phase, prospective data on patients will be collected on prehospital assessment, notification, inhospital assessment, management and outcomes and recorded in a new tailored multihospital trauma registry. All injured patients arriving by ambulance and allocated to a red or yellow priority category will be eligible for inclusion. The intervention will be a prehospital notification application to be used by ambulance clinicians to notify emergency departments of the impending arrival of a patient. The proportion of eligible patients arriving to hospital after notification will be the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcomes evaluated will be availability of a trauma cubicle, presence of a trauma team on patient arrival, time to first chest X-ray and inhospital mortality. Progress: Ethical approval has been obtained from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi and site-specific approval granted by relevant trauma services. The trial has also been registered with the Monash University Human Research and Ethics Committee; Project number: CF16/1814 – 2016000929. Results will be fed back to prehospital and hospital clinicians via a series of reports and presentations. These will be used to facilitate discussions about service redesign and implementation. It is expected that evidence for improved outcomes will enable widespread adoption of this intervention among centres in all settings with less established tools for prehospital assessment and notification.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Mitra, Biswadev
Mathew, Joseph
Gupta, Amit
Cameron, Peter
O'Reilly, Gerard
Soni, Kapil Dev
Kaushik, Gaurav
Howard, Teresa
Fahey, Madonna
Stephenson, Michael
Kumar, Vineet
Vyas, Sharad
Dharap, Satish
Patel, Pankaj
Thakor, Advait
Sharma, Naveen
Walker, Tony
Misra, Mahesh Chandra
Gruen, Russell
Fitzgerald, Mark
format Article
author Mitra, Biswadev
Mathew, Joseph
Gupta, Amit
Cameron, Peter
O'Reilly, Gerard
Soni, Kapil Dev
Kaushik, Gaurav
Howard, Teresa
Fahey, Madonna
Stephenson, Michael
Kumar, Vineet
Vyas, Sharad
Dharap, Satish
Patel, Pankaj
Thakor, Advait
Sharma, Naveen
Walker, Tony
Misra, Mahesh Chandra
Gruen, Russell
Fitzgerald, Mark
author_sort Mitra, Biswadev
title Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
title_short Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
title_full Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
title_fullStr Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
title_full_unstemmed Protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in India
title_sort protocol for a prospective observational study to improve prehospital notification of injured patients presenting to trauma centres in india
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107559
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/45364
_version_ 1683493964677644288