Abstract

BackgroundIndia has one-sixth (16%) of the world’s population but more than one-fifth (21%) of the world’s injury mortality. A trauma registry established by the Australia India Trauma Systems Collaboration (AITSC) Project was utilized to study 30-day in-hospital trauma mortality at high-volume Indian hospitals.MethodsThe AITSC Project collected data prospectively between April 2016 and March 2018 at four Indian university hospitals in New Delhi, Mumbai, and Ahmedabad. Patients admitted with an injury mechanism of road or rail-related injury, fall, assault, or burns were included. The associations between demographic, physiological on-admission vitals, and process-of-care parameters with early (0–24 h), delayed (1–7 days), and late (8–30 days) in-hospital trauma mortality were analyzed.ResultsOf 9354 patients in the AITSC registry, 8606 were subjected to analysis. The 30-day mortality was 12.4% among all trauma victims. Early (24-h) mortality was 1.9%, delayed (1–7 days) mortality was 7.3%, and late (8–30 days) mortality was 3.2%. Abnormal physiological parameters such as a low SBP, SpO2, and GCS and high HR and RR were observed among non-survivors. Early initiation of trauma assessment and monitoring on arrival was an important process of care indicator for predicting 30-day survival.ConclusionsOne in ten admitted trauma patients (12.4%) died in urban trauma centers in India. More than half of the trauma deaths were delayed, beyond 24 h but within one week following injury. On-admission physiological vital signs remain a valid predictor of early 24-h trauma mortality.

Highlights

  • Materials and methodsGlobally, injuries claim more lives than HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria together [1]

  • A trauma registry established by the Australia India Trauma Systems Collaboration (AITSC) Project was utilized to study 30-day in-hospital trauma mortality at high-volume Indian hospitals

  • (24-h) mortality was 1.9%, delayed (1–7 days) mortality was 7.3%, and late (8–30 days) mortality was 3.2%. Abnormal physiological parameters such as a low systolic blood pressure (SBP), SpO2, and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and high heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) were observed among non-survivors

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Summary

Introduction

Materials and methodsGlobally, injuries claim more lives than HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria together [1]. Age-standardized death rates for transport injury have decreased since the 1990s. The Global Road Safety Report recommended the 30-day fatality criteria (dying within 30 days of injury) as a standard to compare post-crash outcomes across trauma centers, within and among nations [5]. In-hospital trauma mortality in Indian hospitals was double that of high-income countries (HIC) [6]. It has been estimated that by providing the appropriate and timely trauma care in hospitals which exists in many HICs in lowto-middle-income countries (LMICs) settings, two million deaths might be averted annually [8]. A trauma registry established by the Australia India Trauma Systems Collaboration (AITSC) Project was utilized to study 30-day in-hospital trauma mortality at high-volume Indian hospitals

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