Abstract

BackgroundPrompt prehospital triage and transportation are essential in an organised trauma system. The benefits of helicopter transportation on mortality in a physician-staffed pre-hospital trauma system remains unknown. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of helicopter transportation on mortality and prehospital triage.MethodsData collection was based on trauma registry for all consecutive major trauma patients transported by helicopter or ground ambulance in the Northern French Alps Trauma system between 2009 and 2017. The primary endpoint was in-hospital death. We performed multivariate logistic regression to compare death between helicopter and ground ambulance.ResultsOverall, 9458 major trauma patients were included. 37% (n = 3524) were transported by helicopter, and 56% (n = 5253) by ground ambulance. Prehospital time from the first call to the arrival at hospital was longer in the helicopter group compared to the ground ambulance group, respectively median time 95 [72–124] minutes and 85 [63–113] minutes (P < 0.001). Median transport time was similar between groups, 20 min [13–30] for helicopter and 21 min [14–32] for ground ambulance. Using multivariate logistic regression, helicopter was associated with reduced mortality compared to ground ambulance (adjusted OR 0.70; 95% CI, 0.53–0.92; P = 0.01) and with reduced undertriage (OR 0.69 95% CI, 0.60–0.80; P < 0.001).ConclusionHelicopter was associated with reduced in-hospital death and undertriage by one third. It did not decrease prehospital and transport times in a system with the same crew using both helicopter or ground ambulance. The mortality and undertriage benefits observed suggest that the helicopter is the proper mode for long-distant transport to a regional trauma centre.

Highlights

  • Prompt prehospital triage and transportation are essential in an organised trauma system

  • Patients transported by ground ambulance had more penetrating injuries (9%) compared to helicopter patients (2%). helicopter treated more patients injured by falls (58%) and ground ambulance transported more patients injured by road traffic accident (61%)

  • Helicopter transportation as part of an integrated trauma system was associated with a significant decrease in mortality for major trauma patients when helicopter was primarily dispatched

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Prompt prehospital triage and transportation are essential in an organised trauma system. The benefits of helicopter transportation on mortality in a physician-staffed pre-hospital trauma system remains unknown. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of helicopter transportation on mortality and prehospital triage. The effectiveness of helicopter in the Northern French Alps trauma system has yet to be rigorously studied. Since both ground ambulance and helicopter are staffed by emergency physicians, there exists a unique opportunity to examine the clinical effectiveness of helicopter while controlling for one of the most important confounding factors that has plagued previous studies: crew expertise. The objective of the present study is to assess the impact of helicopter transportation on in-hospital death in a system where crew expertise is not different between ground ambulance and helicopter

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call