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Journal Article

Citation

Darwish M, McGraw C, Foote CW, Chen C, Sohini V, Bar-Or D, Palacio CH. Trauma Surg. Acute Care Open 2023; 8(1): e001020.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, The author(s) and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Publisher BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/tsaco-2022-001020

PMID

36875918

PMCID

PMC9980355

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Falling from height may lead to significant injuries and time hospitalized; however, there are few studies comparing the specific mechanism of fall. The purpose of this study was to compare injuries from falls after attempting to cross the USA-Mexico border fence (intentional) with injuries from domestic falls (unintentional) of comparable height.

METHODS: This retrospective cohort study included all patients admitted after a fall from a height of 15-30 ft to a level II trauma center between April 2014 and November 2019. Patient characteristics were compared by falls from the border fence with those who fell domestically. Fisher's exact test, χ(2) test and Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney U test were used as appropriate. A significance level of α<0.05 was used.

RESULTS: Of the 124 patients included, 64 (52%) were falls from the border fence while 60 (48%) were domestic falls. Patients sustaining injuries from border falls were on average younger than patients who had domestic falls (32.6 (10) vs 40.0 (16), p=0.002), more likely males (58% vs 41%, p<0.001), fell from a significantly higher distance (20 (20-25) vs 16.5 (15-25), p<0.001), and had a significantly lower median injury severity score (ISS) (5 (4-10) vs 9 (5-16.5), p=0.001). Additionally, compared with domestic falls, border falls had fewer injuries to the head (3% vs 25%, p=0.004) and chest (5% vs 27%, p=0.007), yet more extremity injuries (73% vs 42%, p=0.003), and less had an intensive care unit (ICU) stay (30% vs 63%, p=0.002). No significant differences in mortality were found.

CONCLUSION: Patients sustaining injuries from border crossing falls were slightly younger, and although fell from higher, had a lower ISS, more extremity injuries, and fewer were admitted to the ICU compared with patients sustaining falls domestically. There was no difference in mortality between groups. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III, retrospective study.


Language: en

Keywords

multiple trauma

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