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Journal Article

Citation

Søreide K. Scand. J. Surg. 2010; 99(4): 235-239.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Stavanger University Hospital, Stavanger, Norway. Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Finnish Surgical Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

21159595

Abstract

Background: Temporal patterns of trauma deaths may indicate potential for prevention or sys-tems improvement, but have been poorly investigated in the Scandinavian trauma population. This study examines patterns in trauma deaths to the occurrence in hour and time of the day, day and time in the week, and month and season. Materials and Methods: Investigation of the temporal patterns of death in 260 fatalities un-dergoing autopsy. Time of death were explored according to time of the day (hour; day/night), time of the week (day of week; weekday/weekend) and time of the year (month; season) and analyzed for difference in gender, age, injury type and severity, and mechanisms of injury and death. Results: A total of 260 trauma deaths were included, of which 125 (48%) died in hospital and 194 (75%) were male. No particular peak-hour of the day when deaths occurred was found. One-third of deaths occurred during weekends. For inhospital deaths during weekends, signif-icantly more patients had respiratory distress (RR > 20 or < 16 in 72.5% for weekends and 47.0% for weekdays; p = 0.008) and hypotension (SBP < 90mmHg in 61% vs 40%; p = 0.048) during weekends. Deaths occurred with some monthly variance demonstrated with two monthly peaks in February/March and July/August, respectively. Overall, no statistically different seasonal differences in the occurrence of traumatic deaths, nor any differences in cause of death, type or severity of injury, nor in physiological parameters was found. However, a higher number of inhospital deaths presented with reduced consciousness level (GCS < 8) and severe head injuries (AIS-head = 4) during spring and summer (P = 0.045, chi-square for trend) compared to winter and fall. Conclusions: Trauma deaths in a Scandinavian population did not demonstrate statistically significant differences in overall circadian, weekly or seasonal patterns of trauma death occur-rence. However, the impact of fatal head injuries during spring and summer warrants further investigation.


Language: en

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