Abstract

The challenges posed by the assessment of elderly trauma patients increasethe reliance on emergency CT scanning to diagnose an injury. The COVID-19 pandemic posed challenges to image service delivery. We sought to assess the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the imaging of elderly trauma. All trauma patients aged 65 and over who underwent whole-body CT scanning in the same 3-month period (April-June) in 2019 and 2022 were included in our study. Data was collected on demographics, time of scanning, clinical request details and positive report findings. Anatomical injury distribution, abbreviated injury scale (AIS) and injury severity scores (ISS) were calculated. Consensus judgment was obtained on scan justification and significance of findings. Chi-squared test of association was applied to the categorical outcomes of interest. Associations were considered significant if p<0.05. 79 patients were scanned in the pre-pandemic assessment period versus 217 post-pandemic, an increase of 175%, including a 248% rise in fall-from-standing requests. There was a statistically significant reduction of trauma CT requests meeting fulfilment criteria post-pandemic (95% vs 83%) (p=0.008), with significantly fewer positive findings (45.6% vs 29%) (p=0.024). There was a decrease in median ISS score in the post-pandemic group (p=0.062). Despite increased scanning, there was a reduction in both the number and severity of positive traumatic imaging findings. The pandemic has increased reliance on CT without a concomitant increase in the detection of positive findings nor clinically significant findings. This single-centre study demonstrates the need to further evaluate pan-CT trauma scanning in silver trauma patients.

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