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Night admission to the emergency department: a factor delaying time to surgery in patients with head injury
Author(s) -
Kim YoungJu
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2009.03024.x
Subject(s) - medicine , glasgow coma scale , emergency department , head injury , head trauma , emergency medicine , surgery , nursing
Aim. To investigate factors influencing time from patient’s arrival at the emergency department to surgery in patients with head injury. Background. A better understanding of factors influencing variation in time from patient’s arrival at the emergency department to surgery for patients with head trauma could reduce mortality and morbidity associated with injury. Design. A cross‐sectional study of secondary data. Methods. The sample represented 493 patients with head injury requiring surgery from the 17 level I and II trauma centres. Data were extracted from the National Trauma Data Bank version 4.0. Two‐level hierarchical models were used to analyse data at the patient level while incorporating a unique random effect for each trauma centre. Factors entered in the models included patient characteristics and trauma centre characteristics. Results. Patients with a Glasgow coma scale score of 3–8 in the first ED assessment had earlier time to surgery compared with those with a Glasgow coma scale of 13–15 (β = −0·31, 95% CI = −0·43–0·18). Patients who arrived at the hospital during the nighttime (6pm–8am) had a significantly delayed time to surgery than those who arrived during the daytime (8am–6pm) (β = −0·15, 95% CI = −0·26 to −0·04). Conclusions. The more severely the injured patients were the faster surgery was performed. The time, when patients arrived to the emergency department was found to be a significant factor influencing time to surgery. Patients who arrived at emergency department at night had longer time to surgery than those who arrived during daytime, despite they were more severely head injured than those who arrived during the day. Relevance to clinical practice. When surgical intervention in head‐injured patients is anticipated, especially during the night shift, time from patient’s arrival at emergency department to surgery should be consistently assessed to identify opportunities for improvement in the structure and process of trauma care.