J Trauma
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By using current American College of Surgeons trauma center triage criteria, 52% of patients transported to our level I trauma center are discharged home from the emergency department (ED). Because the majority of our trauma transports were based solely on mechanism of injury, we instituted, in 1990, a two-tiered trauma team activation system. Patients are triaged into major and minor trauma alert categories based on prehospital provider information. For minor trauma patients, respiratory therapy, operating room staff, and blood bank do not respond. The current study evaluated this triage system. ⋯ A two-tiered trauma activation system identifies patients who require a full trauma team response and may result in a more effective use of trauma center resources.
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Trauma registries may contain records without a codable trauma diagnosis, creating a "data gap" that multiplies the number of invalid registry data fields. We designed an investigation intended to determine the incidence of registry records with noncodable trauma diagnoses, characterize those records, and determine the reasons for inadequate diagnosis data. ⋯ The incidence of records with noncodable diagnoses might best be reduced through improved physician documentation, revision of trauma registry inclusion criteria, increased attention by trauma registrars to key sources of documentation, and direct communication with the attending physician when necessary.
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Reamed intramedullary nailing is the current gold standard for the treatment of diaphyseal fractures of the femur and tibia. Current concepts of orthopedic damage control surgery for patients with multiple injuries have placed an emphasis on appropriate surgical timing, limiting blood loss, and the duration of the initial operative procedure(s). Proponents of unreamed nailing have stated that reaming places polytraumatized patients "at risk," in part because it adds to the length of the surgical procedure and may exacerbate the severity of a patient's pulmonary injury. The purpose of this study was to determine how many minutes reaming actually takes and what percentage of operative time reaming comprises during intramedullary nailing of femoral and tibial shaft fractures. ⋯ Our results show that reaming comprises a small percentage of the operative time and the total time a patient spends in the operating room.