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- Henry Robert Budd, Lawrence Maximilian Almond, and Keith Porter.
- Department of Accident and Emergency Medicine, University Hospital North Staffordshire, 16 Rosemary Ednam Close, Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent ST4 7NG, UK. traumastudy@hotmail.com
- Emerg Med J. 2007 Apr 1; 24 (4): 302-4.
IntroductionAppropriate alerting of patients with trauma and informative handover are necessary to allow a smooth transition of care between the prehospital and hospital teams.AimTo identify current practice and areas that need to be improved to facilitate the transition from prehospital care to emergency department resuscitation.MethodsA questionnaire postal study of 100 emergency departments and all 32 ambulance service trusts in England and Wales.ResultsEmergency departments returned 34 (34%) completed questionnaires, and ambulance trusts returned 16 (50%) completed questionnaires. In all, 56.8% of emergency department responders stated that trauma alert information was relayed through ambulance control, 48.5% stated that alert messages were standardised and 18.5% felt that ambulance crews used the trauma severity scoring system during alerting. 64.7% stated that handover was broadcast to the trauma team and 9.1% routinely received digital photographic images. All ambulance service responders included injury mechanism in their alerting criteria and 53.3% used a standard handover structure with 86.7% familiar with the mnemonic ASHICE (Age, Sex, History, Injuries, Condition, Expected time of arrival) for rapid information transmission.DiscussionGreater cooperation between regional emergency departments and ambulance services is necessary to refine the alerting and handover process, producing a pathway through which vital information is collected by trained personnel and communicated without distortion to the resuscitation room, where it may be utilised to inform life-saving decisions.
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