Abstract
Abstract Introduction The current evidence in major trauma highlights that delays at multiple points along the patient care pathway, from incident to surgery, are associated with decreased survival. The aim of this audit was to assess performance across select delay parameters in juveniles aged 16-18 presenting to an adult MTC service following a systematic review of the literature. Method Patient records were interrogated between 1/10/2022-1/3/2023 and audited against 3 national standards: (1) Ambulance Response and Transfer (7 and 45mins respectively) (2) Tranexamic Acid infusion (<3hrs) and (3) CT scan (<60mins). A systematic search was also performed using EMBASE and OVID databases (01/01/2005-/01/11/2023). All studies assessing impact of time to theatre in patients with acute trauma were considered. Results 32 consecutive patients (3F:29M) (median 18 years[16-18]) were identified within the audit period. 40%(n=13) presented following penetrating injury and 35%(n=11) following a road traffic accident. Mean time from incident to admission was 83mins[±36], from incident to tranexamic acid infusion 50mins[±35], and from admission to CT Trauma Series 61mins[+/-100]. Median length of stay was 4 days [IQR=5]. The systematic search yielded 25 studies which were included in the analysis. An Incident2Surgery framework is presented which highlights key time-critical points for diagnosis and intervention. Conclusions Local compliance to national standards for tranexamic acid infusion in appropriate patients and performance of trauma CT was excellent with poor compliance to ambulance arrival and transfer time. The proposed Incident2Surgery framework could be incorporated into mortality prediction and audit tools and assist in the assessment of interventions.
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