Trauma Incidence During the New Jersey COVID-19 Stay-At-Home Order: A Multicenter Study

Given the early surge of COVID-19 in New Jersey (NJ), a statewide executive order (EO) to stay-at-home was instituted on March 22, 2020. We hypothesized that the EO would result in a decreased number of trauma admissions, length of stay, and resources utilized in trauma patients at NJ trauma centers...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2023-04, Vol.284, p.264-268
Hauptverfasser: Badach, Jeremy M., Platoff, Rebecca, Rattigan, Deviney, Butts, Christopher A., Shea, Lisa, Gaughan, John P., Hunter, Krystal, Sifri, Ziad, Porter, John, Egodage, Tanya
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container_title The Journal of surgical research
container_volume 284
creator Badach, Jeremy M.
Platoff, Rebecca
Rattigan, Deviney
Butts, Christopher A.
Shea, Lisa
Gaughan, John P.
Hunter, Krystal
Sifri, Ziad
Porter, John
Egodage, Tanya
description Given the early surge of COVID-19 in New Jersey (NJ), a statewide executive order (EO) to stay-at-home was instituted on March 22, 2020. We hypothesized that the EO would result in a decreased number of trauma admissions, length of stay, and resources utilized in trauma patients at NJ trauma centers. In an institutional review board-approved, retrospective, multicenter study, trauma registries at three level one trauma centers in NJ were queried from March 22 to June 14 in 2020 and compared to the same timeframe the year prior. Epidemiological and clinical data were obtained including demographics, select preexisting conditions, mechanism of injury, injury severity score, resources utilized, and outcomes. 1859 trauma patients were evaluated during the EO versus 2201 the year prior. During the EO, trauma patients were less likely to be transferred from another hospital (21% versus 29% P 
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We hypothesized that the EO would result in a decreased number of trauma admissions, length of stay, and resources utilized in trauma patients at NJ trauma centers. In an institutional review board-approved, retrospective, multicenter study, trauma registries at three level one trauma centers in NJ were queried from March 22 to June 14 in 2020 and compared to the same timeframe the year prior. Epidemiological and clinical data were obtained including demographics, select preexisting conditions, mechanism of injury, injury severity score, resources utilized, and outcomes. 1859 trauma patients were evaluated during the EO versus 2201 the year prior. During the EO, trauma patients were less likely to be transferred from another hospital (21% versus 29% P &lt; 0.05), more likely to have a penetrating mechanism (16% versus 12% P &lt; 0.05), were equally likely to require a procedure (P = 0.44) and had similar injury severity score (5 [interquartile range [IQR] 1-9] versus 5 [IQR 1-9], P = 0.73). There was no significant difference in ventilator days (0 [IQR 0-1] versus 0 [IQR 0-2] P = 0.08), intensive care unit days (2 [IQR 0-4] versus 2 [IQR 0-3] P = 0.99), or length of stay (2 [IQR 1-5] versus 2 [IQR 1-6] P = 0.73). Patients were more likely to be sent home than to rehabilitation or long-term acute care hospital during the EO (81% versus 78%, P = 0.02). 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During the EO, trauma patients were less likely to be transferred from another hospital (21% versus 29% P &lt; 0.05), more likely to have a penetrating mechanism (16% versus 12% P &lt; 0.05), were equally likely to require a procedure (P = 0.44) and had similar injury severity score (5 [interquartile range [IQR] 1-9] versus 5 [IQR 1-9], P = 0.73). There was no significant difference in ventilator days (0 [IQR 0-1] versus 0 [IQR 0-2] P = 0.08), intensive care unit days (2 [IQR 0-4] versus 2 [IQR 0-3] P = 0.99), or length of stay (2 [IQR 1-5] versus 2 [IQR 1-6] P = 0.73). Patients were more likely to be sent home than to rehabilitation or long-term acute care hospital during the EO (81% versus 78%, P = 0.02). 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subjects COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
Executive order
Humans
Incidence
Injury Severity Score
Length of Stay
Lockdown
New Jersey - epidemiology
Retrospective Studies
Trauma
Trauma Centers
Volumes
title Trauma Incidence During the New Jersey COVID-19 Stay-At-Home Order: A Multicenter Study
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