Literature DB >> 18580511

A model for identifying and ranking need for trauma service in nonmetropolitan regions based on injury risk and access to services.

Nadine Schuurman1, Nathaniel Bell, Morad S Hameed, Richard Simons.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Timely access to definitive trauma care has been shown to improve survival rates after severe injury. Unfortunately, despite development of sophisticated trauma systems, prompt, definitive trauma care remains unavailable to over 50 million North Americans, particularly in rural areas. Measures to quantify social and geographic isolation may provide important insights for the development of health policy aimed at reducing the burden of injury and improving access to trauma care in presently under serviced populations.
METHODS: Indices of social deprivation based on census data, and spatial analyses of access to trauma centers based on street network files were combined into a single index, the Population Isolation Vulnerability Amplifier (PIVA) to characterize vulnerability to trauma in socioeconomically and geographically diverse rural and urban communities across British Columbia. Regions with a sufficient core population that are more than one hour travel time from existing services were ranked based on their level of socioeconomic vulnerability.
RESULTS: Ten regions throughout the province were identified as most in need of trauma services based on population, isolation and vulnerability. Likewise, 10 communities were classified as some of the least isolated areas and were simultaneously classified as least vulnerable populations in province. The model was verified using trauma services utilization data from the British Columbia Trauma Registry. These data indicate that including vulnerability in the model provided superior results to running the model based only on population and road travel time.
CONCLUSIONS: Using the PIVA model we have shown that across Census Urban Areas there are wide variations in population dependence on and distances to accredited tertiary/district trauma centers throughout British Columbia. Many of the factors that influence access to definitive trauma care can be combined into a single quantifiable model that researchers in the health sector can use to predict where to place new services. The model can also be used to locate optimal locations for any basket of health services.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18580511     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31815efe0e

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  10 in total

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2.  Effect of predicted travel time to trauma care on mortality in major trauma patients in Nova Scotia

Authors:  Gavin Tansley; Nadine Schuurman; Matthew Bowes; Mete Erdogan; Robert Green; Mark Asbridge; Natalie Yanchar
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3.  Analyzing the effects of place on injury: Does the choice of geographic scale and zone matter?

Authors:  Syed Morad Hameed; Nathaniel Bell; Nadine Schuurman
Journal:  Open Med       Date:  2010-10-05

4.  Trauma care today, what's new?

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5.  Community readiness and momentum: identifying and including community-driven variables in a mixed-method rural palliative care service siting model.

Authors:  V A Crooks; M Giesbrecht; H Castleden; N Schuurman; M Skinner; A Williams
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6.  The Intensive Care Unit Perspective of Becoming a Level I Trauma Center: Challenges of Strategy, Leadership, and Operations Management.

Authors:  Richard H Savel; Wess Cohen; Dena Borgia; Ronald J Simon
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7.  Portrait of rural emergency departments in Quebec and utilisation of the Quebec Emergency Department Management Guide: a study protocol.

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8.  A descriptive study of access to services in a random sample of Canadian rural emergency departments.

Authors:  Richard Fleet; Julien Poitras; Julie Maltais-Giguère; Julie Villa; Patrick Archambault
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Review 9.  A review of rural and remote health service indexes: are they relevant for the development of an Australian rural birth index?

Authors:  Jennifer Pilcher; Sue Kruske; Lesley Barclay
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2014-12-10       Impact factor: 2.655

10.  Assessing access to paediatric trauma centres in Canada, and the impact of the golden hour on length of stay at the hospital: an observational study.

Authors:  Ofer Amram; Nadine Schuurman; Ian Pike; Michael Friger; Natalie L Yanchar
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2016-01-08       Impact factor: 2.692

  10 in total

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