Visual estimates of blood loss by medical laypeople: Effects of blood loss volume, victim gender, and perspective

A severe hemorrhage can result in death within minutes, before professional first responders have time to arrive. Thus, intervention by bystanders, who may lack medical training, may be necessary to save a victim's life in situations with bleeding injuries. Proper intervention requires that bys...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-11, Vol.15 (11), p.e0242096-e0242096
Hauptverfasser: Phillips, Rachel, Friberg, Marc, Lantz Cronqvist, Mattias, Jonson, Carl-Oscar, Prytz, Erik
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creator Phillips, Rachel
Friberg, Marc
Lantz Cronqvist, Mattias
Jonson, Carl-Oscar
Prytz, Erik
description A severe hemorrhage can result in death within minutes, before professional first responders have time to arrive. Thus, intervention by bystanders, who may lack medical training, may be necessary to save a victim's life in situations with bleeding injuries. Proper intervention requires that bystanders accurately assess the severity of the injury and respond appropriately. As many bystanders lack tools and training, they are limited in terms of the information they can use in their evaluative process. In hemorrhage situations, visible blood loss may serve as a dominant cue to action. Therefore, understanding how medically untrained bystanders (i.e., laypeople) perceive hemorrhage is important. The purpose of the current study was to investigate the ability of laypeople to visually assess blood loss and to examine factors that may impact accuracy and the classification of injury severity. A total of 125 laypeople watched 78 short videos each of individuals experiencing a hemorrhage. Victim gender, volume of blood lost, and camera perspective were systematically manipulated in the videos. The results revealed that laypeople overestimated small volumes of blood loss (from 50 to 200 ml), and underestimated larger volumes (from 400 to 1900 ml). Larger volumes of blood loss were associated with larger estimation errors. Further, blood loss was underestimated more for female victims than male victims and their hemorrhages were less likely to be classified as life-threatening. These results have implications for training and intervention design.
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subjects Accuracy
Adolescent
Adult
Biology and Life Sciences
Bleeding
Blood
Care and treatment
Decision making
Diagnosis
Emergency medicine
Emergency response
Estimates
Estimation errors
Experiments
Female
Females
First aid
Gender
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health risk assessment
Hemorrhage
Hemorrhage - psychology
Humans
Influence
Information science
Injuries
Intervention
Male
Males
Medical research
Medicine and Health Sciences
People and Places
Perception
Physical Sciences
Sex Factors
Social aspects
Social Sciences
Training
Trauma
Variables
Video
title Visual estimates of blood loss by medical laypeople: Effects of blood loss volume, victim gender, and perspective
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