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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Bystander trauma care—effect of the level of training
Walter MauritzLinda E. PelinkaA. ThierbachSilja Reutersubject
AdultMaleEmergency Medical ServicesResuscitationAdolescentHealth PersonnelMEDLINEHemorrhageEmergency NursingAffect (psychology)Intensive careBystander effectEmergency medical servicesFirst AidHumansMedicineChildAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryMiddle AgedTrauma caremedicine.diseaseEmergency MedicineEducational StatusWounds and InjuriesFemaleMedical emergencyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessFirst aiddescription
Background: The bystander is often the first person present at the scene of an accident. Our aim was to determine how often and how well bystanders perform trauma care and whether trauma care is affected by the bystander’s level of training, relationship to the patient and numbers of bystanders present. Patients and methods:In a prospective 1-year study, the emergency medical service in two European cities collected data on trauma calls. Questionnaires were used to document the bystanders’ level of training (none, basic, advanced, professional), the bystander’s relationship to the patient, and the number of bystanders present, and to assess whether five separate measures of trauma care (ensuring scene safety, extrication of the patient, positioning, control of haemorrhage, prevention of hypothermia) were performed correctly, incorrectly, or not at all. Results: Two thousand nine hundred and thirty-two trauma calls were documented and bystanders were present in 1720 (58.7%). All measures except ensuring scene safety and prevention of hypothermia were affected by the bystander’s level of training. Correct extrication, positioning, and control of haemorrhage increased with the level of bystander training while the number of patients who were not attended decreased ( P< 0.05, P< 0.005, P< 0.005), respectively. The relationship to the patient did not affect whether, or how well, any measure was performed. The number of bystanders present only affected prevention of hypothermia, which was performed most often when only one bystander was present. Conclusion: Improved, more widespread training could increase the frequency and quality of bystander trauma care further. © 2004 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-08-07 | Resuscitation |