Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8718888 | Injury | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
A majority of severely injured trauma patients are hypothermic well into the perioperative period after initial admission. An absence of having temperature measurement during initial hospitalization is associated with increased in-hospital mortality amongst this patient group. Quality improvement initiatives should aim to strive for ongoing temperature measurement as a key performance indicator and early prevention and treatment of hypothermia during initial resuscitation.
Keywords
MVCPACUDCRTQIPINRTICREBIQRISSTACRTSACSEMSOPRoperating roomDamage control resuscitationRevised Trauma ScoreLosintensive care unitICUMotor vehicle collisionTrauma Quality Improvement ProgramTraumacomputerized tomographyemergency medical servicesQuality indicatorsbeats per minutelength of stayconfidence intervalinterquartile rangeManagementBMPodds ratioInternational Normalized RatioInjury severity scoreResearch ethics boardHypothermiapre-hospitalAmerican College of SurgeonsTrauma-induced coagulopathy
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Authors
A. Alam, Rafael Olarte, Jeannie Callum, Arsham Fatahi, B. Nascimento, Claude Laflamme, Robert Cohen, Avery B. Nathens, Homer Tien,