Abstract

AimAlthough the prolongation of the time between injury and hospital arrival of traffic accident patients can influence their prognosis, factors associated with the difficulty in hospital acceptance of these patients have not been sufficiently evaluated in Japan.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the population‐based ambulance records of all traffic accident patients for whom the Osaka Municipal Fire Department (Osaka City, Japan) dispatched an ambulance in 2013. We defined “cases with difficulty in hospital acceptance” as cases that required ≥4 calls by emergency medical service personnel at the scene before receiving hospital acceptance. We included patient characteristics (age, sex, coma status, and trauma severity judged by emergency medical service personnel), time factors (day/night or weekday/holiday and weekends), and accident location for multivariable logistic regression analysis to assess factors associated with the difficulty in hospital acceptance.ResultsAmong 13,427 traffic accident patients, 2,033 (15.1%) were cases with difficulty in hospital acceptance. Pediatric patients (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 1.265; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.060–1.509), male sex (adjusted OR, 1.260; 95% CI, 1.135–1.398), moderate‐grade trauma (adjusted OR, 2.241; 95% CI, 1.972–2.547), severe‐grade trauma (adjusted OR, 2.057; 95% CI, 1.249–3.388), holidays and weekends (adjusted OR, 1.702; 95% CI, 1.539–1.882), and night‐time (adjusted OR, 2.720; 95% CI, 2.443–3.027) were positively associated with difficulty in hospital acceptance.ConclusionsUsing population‐based ambulance records from a large urban community in Japan, we showed that the difficulty in hospital acceptance of patients at the scene of traffic accidents was positively associated with several prehospital factors.

Highlights

  • R ECENTLY, THE NUMBER of traffic accidents has been decreasing in Japan because of drivers’observance of traffic laws, advances in automotive technology, and crackdowns for traffic violations by the police.[1]

  • Prehospital ambulance diversion of traffic accident patients 403 confidence interval (CI) with use of a logistic regression model to evaluate the factors associated with the difficulty in hospital acceptance at the scene for traffic accident patients, and we considered potential factors that existed before the emergency medical service (EMS) personnel made contact with the emergency patient

  • The number of emergency patients injured by traffic accidents was 13,427, and these were the subjects of this study (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

R ECENTLY, THE NUMBER of traffic accidents has been decreasing in Japan because of drivers’observance of traffic laws, advances in automotive technology, and crackdowns for traffic violations by the police.[1]. R ECENTLY, THE NUMBER of traffic accidents has been decreasing in Japan because of drivers’. In Japan, when an emergency medical service (EMS) is activated by emergency telephone call, the EMS personnel dispatched at the scene select the appropriate hospital after assessing the patient condition. After obtaining the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine.

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