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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Retrospective study of 1000 deaths from injury in England and Wales

I. D. Anderson, +3 more
- 07 May 1988 - 
- Vol. 296, Iss: 6632, pp 1305-1308
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TLDR
One thousand consecutive deaths from injury in England and Wales were reviewed by four independent assessors, who studied necropsy reports to identify deaths in hospital that might have been preventable.
Abstract
One thousand consecutive deaths from injury in 11 coroner9s districts in England and Wales were reviewed by four independent assessors, who studied necropsy reports to identify deaths in hospital that might have been preventable. Of 514 patients admitted to hospital alive, 102 deaths (20%) were judged by all four assessors to have been potentially preventable. When those cases in which three out of four assessors considered that the death was preventable were added the total rose to 170 (33%). Nearly two thirds of all non-central nervous system deaths were judged to have been preventable. The median age of the 170 patients whose deaths were preventable was 41, and the mean Injury Severity Score was 29. Further analysis suggested that the preventable deaths were principally the result of failure to stop bleeding and prevent hypoxia and the absence of, or delay in, surgical treatment. The results closely parallel those from similar studies from the United States and suggest that there are serious deficiencies in the services for managing severe injury in England and Wales. Debate is needed now on how to correct these deficiencies. In particular, the place of trauma centres must be considered.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence, location and reasons for avoidable in-hospital cardiac arrest in a district general hospital.

TL;DR: The majority of treated in-hospital cardiac arrests are potentially avoidable, and multiple system failures include delays and errors in diagnosis, inadequate interpretation of investigations, incomplete treatment, inexperienced doctors and management in inappropriate clinical areas.
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Preventable or potentially preventable mortality at a mature trauma center.

TL;DR: Preventable or potentially preventable deaths are rare but do occur at an academic Level I trauma center and delay in treatment and error in judgment are the leading causes of preventable and potentially Preventable deaths.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preventable deaths from hemorrhage at a level I Canadian trauma center.

TL;DR: Hemorrhage from blunt pelvic injury was the major cause of exsanguination in 12 of 14 of these preventable deaths, suggesting blunt injury is the major mechanism leading to trauma deaths.
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Diagnostic errors in an accident and emergency department

TL;DR: Diagnostic errors occurring in a busy district general hospital accident and emergency (A&E) department over four years resulted in complaints and legal actions and three patients who had a diagnostic error made, later died.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are pre-hospital deaths from accidental injury preventable?

L M Hussain, +1 more
- 23 Apr 1994 - 
TL;DR: Death was potentially preventable in at least 39% of those who died from accidental injury before they reached hospital and training in first aid should be available more widely, and particularly to motorists as many pre-hospital deaths that could be prevented are due to road accidents.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Coefficient of agreement for nominal Scales

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a procedure for having two or more judges independently categorize a sample of units and determine the degree, significance, and significance of the units. But they do not discuss the extent to which these judgments are reproducible, i.e., reliable.
Journal ArticleDOI

The injury severity score: a method for describing patients with multiple injuries and evaluating emergency care

TL;DR: Results of this investigation indicate that the Injury Severity Score represents an important step in solving the problem of summarizing injury severity, especially in patients with multiple trauma.
Journal ArticleDOI

The injury severity score: an update

TL;DR: The injury severity score has changed little in the past decade, but the number of hospital admissions and the severity of the injuries has changed significantly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systems of Trauma Care: A Study of Two Counties

TL;DR: It is suggested that survival rates for major trauma can be improved by an organized system of trauma care that includes the resources of a trauma center.
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