Analysis of pediatric trauma in combat zone to inform high-fidelity simulation predeployment training

13Citations
Citations of this article
67Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Objectives: The military uses "just-in-time" training to refresh deploying medical personnel on skills necessary for medical and surgical care in the theater of operations. The burden of pediatric care at Role 2 facilities has yet to be characterized; pediatric predeployment training has been extremely limited and primarily informed by anecdotal experience. The goal of this analysis was to describe pediatric care at Role 2 facilities to enable data-driven development of high-fidelity simulation training and core knowledge concepts specific to the combat zone. Setting and Patients: A retrospective review of the Role 2 Database was conducted on all pediatric patients (< 18 yr) admitted to Role 2 in Afghanistan from 2008-2014. Interventions: Three cohorts were determined based on commercially available simulation models: Group 1: Less than 1 year, Group 2: 1-8 years, Group 3: More than 8 years. The groups were sub-stratified by point of injury care, pre-hospital management, and Role 2 facility medical/surgical management. Measurements and Main Results: Appropriate descriptive statistics (chi square and Student t test) were utilized to define demographic and epidemiologic characteristics of this population. Of 15,404 patients in the Role 2 Database, 1,318 pediatric subjects (8.5%) were identified. The majority of patients were male (80.0%) with a mean age of 9.5 years (± sd, 4.5). Injury types included: Penetrating (56%), blunt (33%), and burns (7%). Mean transport time from point of injury to Role 2 was 198 minutes (±24.5 min). Mean Glasgow Coma Scale and Revised Trauma Score were 14 (± 0.1) and 7.0 (± 1.4), respectively. Role 2 surgical procedures occurred for 424 patients (32%). Overall mortality was 4% (n = 58). Conclusions: We have described the epidemiology of pediatric trauma admitted to Role 2 facilities, characterizing the spectrum of pediatric injuries that deploying providers should be equipped to manage. This analysis will function as a needs assessment to facilitate high-fidelity simulation training and the development of "pediatric trauma core knowledge concepts" for deploying providers.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Reeves, P. T., Auerbach, M. M., Le, T. D., Caldwell, N. W., Edwards, M. J., Mann-Salinas, E. A., … Borgman, M. A. (2018). Analysis of pediatric trauma in combat zone to inform high-fidelity simulation predeployment training. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, 19(4), e199–e206. https://doi.org/10.1097/PCC.0000000000001461

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free