Pregnancy is Not a Sufficient Indicator for Trauma Team Activation

BACKGROUND:Trauma complicates 6% to 7% of all pregnancies. Adverse outcomes are rare when monitoring is normal and early warning signs absent. Trauma systems often use pregnancy as the sole criterion (PSC) for partial trauma team activation. This study compares outcomes of pregnant patients presenti...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of trauma 2007-09, Vol.63 (3), p.550-555
Hauptverfasser: Greene, Wendy, Robinson, Linda, Rizzo, Anne G., Sakran, Joseph, Hendershot, Kimberly, Moore, Aaron, Weatherspoon, Kimberly, Fakhry, Samir M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND:Trauma complicates 6% to 7% of all pregnancies. Adverse outcomes are rare when monitoring is normal and early warning signs absent. Trauma systems often use pregnancy as the sole criterion (PSC) for partial trauma team activation. This study compares outcomes of pregnant patients presenting with PSC versus other physiologic, mechanistic, or anatomic (OPMA) activation criteria. METHODS:Three hundred fifty-two consecutive obstetric partial trauma team activation patients (2000-2005) were grouped by length of gestation and evaluated for activation criteria and early maternal and fetal outcomes. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and analysis of variance. RESULTS:Patients ranged in age from 16 to 44 (mean age, 28 ± 6.4) and in weeks gestation between 1 and 40 weeks (mean, 25 ± 8 weeks). Eighty-two percent had been in vehicle crashes. One hundred eighty-eight (58%) were activated based on PSC and 137 on OPMA. No PSC patient had injuries sufficient to warrant trauma service admission. Ninety-four percent of all PSCs of
ISSN:0022-5282
1529-8809
DOI:10.1097/TA.0b013e31809ff244