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Examining emergency medical services' prehospital transport times for trauma patients during COVID-19

Stephanie Jarvis, Kristin Salottolo, Gina M. Berg, Matthew Carrick, Rachel Caiafa, David Hamilton, Kaysie L. Banton, Mark J. Lieser, David Bar‐Or

2021The American Journal of Emergency Medicine22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Longer prehospital times were associated with increased odds for survival in trauma patients. The purpose of this study was to determine how the COVID-19 pandemic affected emergency medical services (EMS) prehospital times for trauma patients. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study compared trauma patients transported via EMS to six US level I trauma centers admitted 1/1/19-12/31/19 (2019) and 3/16/20-6/30/20 (COVID-19). Outcomes included: total EMS pre-hospital time (dispatch to hospital arrival), injury to dispatch time, response time (dispatch to scene arrival), on-scene time (scene arrival to scene departure), and transportation time (scene departure to hospital arrival). Fisher's exact, chi-squared, or Kruskal-Wallis tests were used, alpha = 0.05. All times are presented as median (IQR) minutes. RESULTS: There were 9400 trauma patients transported by EMS: 79% in 2019 and 21% during the COVID-19 pandemic. Patients were similar in demographics and transportation mode. Emergency room deaths were also similar between 2019 and COVID-19 [0.6% vs. 0.9%, p = 0.13].There were no differences between 2019 and during COVID-19 for total EMS prehospital time [44 (33, 63) vs. 43 (33, 62), p = 0.12], time from injury to dispatch [16 (6, 55) vs. 16 (7, 77), p = 0.41], response time [7 (5, 12) for both groups, p = 0.27], or on-scene time [16 (12-22) vs. 17 (12,22), p = 0.31]. Compared to 2019, transportation time was significantly shorter during COVID-19 [18 (13, 28) vs. 17 (12, 26), p = 0.01]. CONCLUSION: The median transportation time for trauma patients was marginally significantly shorter during COVID-19; otherwise, EMS prehospital times were not significantly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineEmergency medical servicesCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Emergency medicineInjury Severity ScoreDemographicsRetrospective cohort studyTrauma centerPenetrating traumaArrival timePandemicMedical emergencyEmergency departmentPoison controlInjury preventionInternal medicineSurgeryDemographyDiseaseTransport engineeringSociologyEngineeringInfectious disease (medical specialty)PsychiatryBluntTrauma and Emergency Care StudiesCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsDisaster Response and Management