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Journal Article

Citation

Janssen DJ, Burns BJ. Injury 2013; 44(5): 624-628.

Affiliation

Greater Sydney Area Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (GSA-HEMS), Drover Rd, Bankstown Airport 2200, NSW, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.injury.2012.04.012

PMID

22633694

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Greater Sydney Area Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (GSA-HEMS) operates a doctor and paramedic team providing pre-hospital and inter-hospital retrieval. Falls are an important cause of morbidity and mortality among trauma patients. In NSW, patients injured by falling comprise 38% of those with serious to critical injuries (ISS>15). The mortality of falls in this group is 15.2%, higher than the mortality rate for other common injury mechanisms. Mortality rate for high falls (>5m) is similar to that of low/medium falls. AIMS: The primary aim was describe the basic demographics, transportation, injured areas, treatment and mortality of falls survivors attended to by GSA-HEMS. The secondary aim was to determine if there was any association between height of fall, revised trauma score (RTS(c)) and need for advanced pre-hospital interventions. METHODS: Cases of trauma due to falling were identified by searching an electronic database covering the period June 2007 to March 2010. Hardcopy casesheets were abstracted using a proforma. Data was collected on demographics, timings, winch use, height of fall, physiologic variables, injured areas, advanced pre-hospital interventions and mortality at 24h. Associations between height of fall and RTS(c), and height of fall and pre-hospital interventions were compared using Fischer's exact test. RESULTS: One hundred and fifty-four of 208 potential cases identified were cases of trauma due to falls, representing 13% of all pre-hospital trauma cases retrieved by the service. Median age of patients was 37, 67% of patients were male. Helicopter transport was use for 97% of cases, with 47% requiring winch extraction. High falls (>5m), which accounted for 25% of cases, were more likely to show non-normal RTS(c). A greater proportion of high falls required advanced pre-hospital interventions. CONCLUSIONS: Our experience describes a HEMS system that is often called to falls not just based on injury severity or requirement for advanced pre-hospital intervention, but also due to geographical and topographical impediments to access and transport of the patient by ground. This may have implications in forward planning and activation of HEMS services.


Language: en

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