| Literature DB >> 27206483 |
M Kulla1, F Josse2, M Stierholz3, B Hossfeld2, L Lampl2, M Helm2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As a part of the European Union Naval Force - Mediterranean Operation Sophia (EUNAVFOR Med), the Federal Republic of Germany is contributing to avoid further loss of lives at sea by supplying two naval vessels. In the study presented here we analyse the medical requirements of such rescue missions, as well as the potential benefits of various additional monitoring devices in identifying sick/injured refugees within the primary onboard medical assessment process.Entities:
Keywords: Asylum seeker; German Armed Forces; Initial assessment; Initial treatment; Mediterranean Sea; Refugee; Triage
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27206483 PMCID: PMC4873997 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0270-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1Chart of patient flow and medical care provided to refugees rescued from distress at. The focus of the chart is on initial assessment and medical care: First measurement of CBT, SpO2 and PR by paramedics, than a rough inspection and examination of the refugees by an experienced emergency physician (general condition, nutritional condition, exposed skin, eyes, hands, parts of the body the patients chose to show, and palpation of the peripheral pulse of the radial artery [31]) (Abbr.: SpO2 = peripheral oxygen saturation; CBT = core body temperature PR = pulse rate) Green arrows indicate a positive decision; red arrows a negative)
Summary of demographic data of all people/refugees rescued from distress at sea
| Overall refugee population | |
|---|---|
| Number [n] |
|
| Male Gender | 2048/2656 (77.1 %) |
| Age structure | |
| ▪ Infant | 19/2656 (0.7 %) |
| ▪ Child | 274/2656 (10.3 %) |
| ▪ Adult | 2351/2656 (88.5 %) |
| ▪ Elderly | 31/2656 (1.2 %) |
| Pregnant women | 24/2656 (0.9 %) |
| Sick patients | 448/2656 (16.9 %) |
| Admission to Emergency field hospitala | 63/2056 (3.1 %) |
Note: aAdmission to emergency field hospital was not recorded for refugee boats nos. 1 and 2
Fig. 2a-c: Chart showing PR (pulse rate - a), CBT (core body temperature -b) and SpO2 (peripheral oxygen saturation - c) as part of initial assessment by medical personnel other than physicians as grouped boxplots. Subgroup analysis of data, based on state of health (sick patient/healthy participant), treatment at emergency field hospital (yes/no) and refugee boat. Note: # Mann–Whitney-U Test . ❖ Kruskal-Wallis Test
Absolute numbers and percentages of people rescued from distress at sea in the defined categories of vital signs (Categorised values of pulse rate (PR), core body temperature (CBT) and peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2))
| Category | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PR [/min] | ≤39 | 40-49 | 50-59 | 60-80 | 81-120 | 121-150 | ≥151 | Missing data |
| Healthy participants | 0 (0.0 %) | 1 (0.1 %) | 5 (0.3 %) | 174 (9.0 %) | 1027 (53.0 %) | 344 (17.7 %) | 31 (1.6 %) | 717 (27.0 %) |
| Sick patients | 0 (0.0 %) | 0 (0.0 %) | 1 (0.1 %) | 32 (1.7 %) | 200 (10.3 %) | 101 (5.2 %) | 23 (1.2 %) | |
| CBT [°C] | ≤34.9 | 35.0-35.9 | 36.0-37.5 | 37.6-39.0 | ≥39.1 | Missing data | ||
| Healthy participants | 37 (1.7 %) | 246 (11.1 %) | 1384 (62.4 %) | 160 (7.2 %) | 3 (0.1 %) | 439 (16.5 %) | ||
| Sick patients | 7 (0.3 %) | 30 (1.4 %) | 247 (11.1 %) | 100 (4.5 %) | 3 (0.1 %) | |||
| SpO2 [%] | ≤84 | 85-89 | 90-95 | 96-100 | Missing data | |||
| Healthy participants | 6 (0.3 %) | 33 (1.7 %) | 76 (3.9 %) | 1469 (75.7 %) | 716 (27.0 %) | |||
| Sick patients | 0 (0.0 %) | 12 (0.6 %) | 12 (0.6 %) | 332 (17.1 %) | ||||
Coefficients of the binary logistic regression model predicting whether a rescued person will be sick/injured. Three different models are calculated: In the left column the results of the univariate binary logistic model are demonstrated. The middle column shows the results of the multivariate binary logistic regression without including the information of the refugees boat. The right column includes all information in one model. (Abbr.: regression coefficient (R), p-Value (p), calculated Odds Ratio (OR) with its corresponding 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI)
| Variable | Category | Univariate binary logistic regression model | Multivariate binary logistic regression model without refugee boat | Multivariate binary logistic regression with refugee boat included: | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R | P | OR [95 % CI] | R | P | OR [95 % CI] | R | P | OR [95 % CI] | ||
| PR [/min] | ≤39 | not calculated a | not calculated a | not calculated a | ||||||
| 40-49 | −21.20 | 1.000 | not calculated a | not calculated a | not calculated a | |||||
| 50-59 | −1.61 | 0.14 | 0.20 [0.02-1.71] | −1.18 | .310 | 0.31 [0.03 - 2.99] | −0.61 | .617 | 0.54 [0.05-5.91] | |
| 60-80 | −1.69 | < .001 | 0.18 [0.13-0.27] | −1.07 | .004 | 0.34 [0.17 - 0.71] | −0.58 | .146 | 0.56 [0.26-1.22] | |
| 81-120 | −1.64 | < .001 | 0.20 [0.17-0.23] | −0.96 | .002 | 0.38 [0.21 - 0.71] | −0.75 | .027 | 0.47 [0.24-0.92] | |
| 121-150 | −1.23 | < .001 | 0.29 [0.24-0.37] | −0.71 | .025 | 0.49 [0.27 - 0.92] | −0.57 | .101 | 0.57 [0.29-1.12] | |
| ≥151 | −0,30 | .287 | 0.74 [0.43-1.27] | not included b | not included b | |||||
| CBT [°C] | ≤34.9 | −1.67 | < .001 | 0.19 [0.08-0.42] | −1.18 | .264 | 0.31 [0.04 - 2.43] | −0.47 | .676 | 0.63 [0.07-5.57] |
| 35.0 – 35.9 | −2.10 | < .001 | 0.12 [0.08-0.18] | −1.58 | .062 | 0.21 [0.04 -1.09] | −1.33 | .145 | 0.26 [0.04-1.58] | |
| 36.0 – 37.5 | −1.72 | < .001 | 0.18 [0.15-0.20] | −1.53 | .065 | 0.22 [0.04 - 1.10] | −1.69 | .056 | 0.18 [0.03-1.05] | |
| 37.6 – 39.0 | −0.47 | < .001 | 0.63 [0.49-0.80] | −0.38 | .653 | 0.69 [0.13 -3.54] | −1.18 | .193 | 0.31 [0.05-1.81] | |
| ≥39.1 | 0.00 | 1.000 | 1.00 [0.20-5.0] | not included b | not included b | |||||
| SpO2 [%] | ≤84 | −21.20 | 1.000 | not calculated a | not calculated a | not calculated a | ||||
| 85-89 | −1.01 | .003 | 0.36 [0.19-0,70] | 1.22 | .339 | 3.37 [0.28 - 40.88] | 0.20 | .886 | 1.22 [0.08-17.71] | |
| 90-95 | −1.85 | < .001 | 0.16 [0.07-0.29] | 0.28 | .822 | 1.33 [0.11 - 15.91] | −0.64 | .639 | 0.53 [0.04-7.55] | |
| 96-100 | −1.49 | < .001 | 0.23 [0.20-0.26] | 0.52 | .669 | 1.68 [0.15-18.39] | −0.54 | .677 | 0.58 [0.05-7.52] | |
| Age category | Infant | −2.83 | .006 | 0.06 [0.01-0.44] | −0.21 | .880 | 0.81 [0.05 -12.21] | −0.70 | .624 | 0.50 [0.03-8.10] |
| Child | −1.80 | < .001 | 0.17 [0.12-0.23] | −0.14 | .873 | 0.87 [0.16 -4.72] | −0.35 | .695 | 0.70 [0.12-4.08] | |
| Adult | −1.58 | < .001 | 0.21 [0.19-0.23] | −0.39 | .638 | 0.67 [0.13 -3.47] | −0.56 | .519 | 0.57 [0.10-3.14] | |
| Elderly | −0.15 | .782 | 0.86 [0.29-2.55] | not included b | not included b | |||||
| Gender | Male | 0.48 | < .001 | 1.62 [1.24-2.11] | 0.70 | < .001 | 2.01 [1.47 - 2.76] | 0.53 | .003 | 1.70 [1.21-2.40] |
| Refugee Boat No. | 1 | 0.94 | < .001 | 2.56 [1.56-4.21] | 0.87 | .022 | 2.39 [1.14-5.01] | |||
| 2 | 1.17 | .001 | 3.23 [1.60-6.51] | 1.19 | .003 | 3.27 [1.50-7.14] | ||||
| 3 | 1.75 | < .001 | 5.77 [3.58-9.29] | 1.88 | < .001 | 6.56 [3.71-11.58] | ||||
| 4 | −0.05 | .863 | 0.95 [0.54-1.68] | −0.02 | .956 | 0.98 [0.47-2.06] | ||||
| 5 | 1.20 | < .001 | 3.33 [1.73-6.42] | 1.33 | < .001 | 3.79 [1.82-7.90] | ||||
| 6 | 1.80 | < .001 | 6.05 [3.20-11.44] | 1.84 | < .001 | 6.30 [3.06-12.95] | ||||
| 7 | 0.22 | .651 | 1.24 [0.49-3.16] | 0.41 | .418 | 1.51 [0.56-4.09] | ||||
| 8 | 1.79 | < .001 | 5.99 [3.60-9.96] | 1.98 | < .001 | 7.25 [3.90-13.49] | ||||
| 9 | 3.12 | < .001 | 22.59 [12.70-40.19] | 2.80 | < .001 | 16.52 [8.16-33.44] | ||||
| 10 | not calculatedb | not included b | ||||||||
Note: aSubcategory is not calculated due to its small sample size
bSubcategory is not included because it is explained by the other subcategories
Analysis of demographic data, condition/injury patterns, and measures taken of the patient’s population
| Overall patient population | |
|---|---|
| Number of sick/injured patients |
|
| Age group | |
| ▪ Infant | 1/448 (0.2 %) |
| ▪ Child | 38/448 (8.5 %) |
| ▪ Adult | 403/448 (90.0 %) |
| ▪ Elderly | 6/448 (1.3 %) |
| Classification of symptoms | |
| ▪ Dermatological problems | 248/448 (55.4 %) |
| ▪ Cardiovascular problems | 99/448 (22.1 %) |
| ▪ Pulmonary problems | 20/448 (4.5 %) |
| ▪ Abdominal problems/GI infection | 5/448 (1.1 %) |
| ▪ Orthopaedic problems | 20/448 (4.5 %) |
| ▪ Injuries/Traumatological problems | 34/448 (7.6 %) |
| ▪ ENT/OMS problems | 8/448 (1.8 %) |
| ▪ Ophthalmological problems | 8/448 (1.8 %) |
| ▪ Gynaecological problems | 5/448 (1.1 %) |
| Initial treatment | |
| ▪ Infusion therapy | 35/448 (7.8 %) |
| ▪ Analgesia | 39/448 (8.7 %) |
| ▪ Antibiotic treatment | 10/448 (2.2 %) |
| ▪ Bandages/wound cleaning | 19/448 (4.2 %) |
| ▪ Other medical measures | 14/448 (3.1 %) |
| ▪ Admission to emergency field hospital | 62/365 (17.0 %) |
Notes: The symptoms of 23 of the patients were not classified. The symptoms of 22 of the sick patients were assigned to two areas. Three pregnant women were also classified as sick/injured. Admission to emergency field hospital is not recorded in refugee boat no. 1 and 2
Fig. 3Overview and classification of symptoms of 448 rescued people from distress at sea. The stacked bar chart shows the proportion of main symptoms in refugee boat 1 to 10 as well as the absolute figures