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Journal Article

Citation

Cioè-Peña EC, Granados JC, Wrightsmith LL, Henriquez-Vigil AL, Moresky RT. Trauma (Sage) 2017; 19(2): 118-126.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1460408616672491

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BackgroundIn El Salvador, over 32% of all deaths are due to trauma. However, El Salvador lacks any established standardized trauma response system to treat the most critical of Salvadoran patients. In an effort to improve trauma response in El Salvador, we assessed the impact of a trauma-specific skills training, which could improve trauma care in a setting where no formal trauma training exists.

METHODSWe used a pre- and post-interventional design study to measure the critical actions performed during a trauma event, as well as the case-fatality rate, emergency ward-to-operating room time, and utilization of ultrasound. The intervention was a primary trauma care course taught to all study participants.

RESULTSEighteen providers were observed over a six-month period and 194 patient encounters (48 pre- and 146 post-intervention) were recorded. There was no significant difference in observed critical actions during major trauma between the pre-intervention and post-intervention periods. There was a significant improvement in ultrasound usage post-intervention (9.5% to 21.4%; p?=?0.04).

CONCLUSIONThe lack of behavior change observed following a two-day trauma training underscores the gap between physician knowledge and applied behavior change. This is a limited single center study, but further examination is necessary to determine the role of two-day training courses in the larger context of behavior change within a health system that has no formal post-graduate training in or defined algorithmic trauma care.


Language: en

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