| Literature DB >> 30735553 |
Shreyus S Kulkarni1, Barry Dewitt2, Baruch Fischhoff2, Matthew R Rosengart1, Derek C Angus3, Melissa Saul4, Donald M Yealy5, Deepika Mohan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Under-triage of severely injured patients presenting to non-trauma centers (failure to transfer to a trauma center) remains problematic despite quality improvement efforts. Insights from the behavioral science literature suggest that physician heuristics (intuitive judgments), and in particular the representativeness heuristic (pattern recognition), may contribute to under-triage. However, little is known about how the representativeness heuristic is instantiated in practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30735553 PMCID: PMC6368323 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Representative characteristics and conceptual mapping to injuries.
| MVC | Abnormal GCS | Neurologic Deficit | Hemodynamic instability | Hypoxia | Open fracture | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traumatic brain injury | X | X | X | |||
| Rib fracture | X | X | X | |||
| Intraabdominal injury | X | X | ||||
| Spinal injury | X | X | ||||
| Pelvic fracture | X | X | ||||
| Long bone fracture | X | X |
aMVC = motor vehicle collision
bGCS = Glasgow Coma Scale
Fig 1Cohort selection flow diagram.
Demographics and injury features (n = 3,199).
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 71.2 (20.1) |
| Age ranges, n (%) | |
| < 70 | 1,188 (37) |
| 70–79 | 511 (16) |
| 80–89 | 1,014 (32) |
| ≥ 90 | 486 (15) |
| Sex, n (%) | |
| Male | 1,217 (38) |
| Female | 1,982 (62) |
| ISS | 10.9 (3.5) |
| < 15 | 2,759 (86) |
| > 15 | 440 (14) |
| Comorbidities, n (%) | |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 596 (19) |
| Congestive heart failure | 388 (12) |
| Hypertension | 1,740 (54) |
| Kidney disease | 240 (8) |
| Diabetes | 619 (19) |
| Cirrhosis | 47 (1) |
| Anemia | 431 (13) |
| Mechanism, n (%) | |
| Assault | 132 (4) |
| Crush | 115 (3) |
| Fall | 2,740 (86) |
| MVC | 178 (6) |
| Penetrating | 34 (1) |
| AIS regions ≥ 3, n (%) | |
| Head | 819 (26) |
| Face | 0 |
| Chest | 813 (25) |
| Abdomen | 85 (3) |
| Extremity | 1,535 (48) |
| External | 1 (0) |
| No. of regions with AIS | |
| 1 | 2, 643 (83) |
| 2 | 508 (16) |
| 3 | 47 (1) |
| 4 | 1 (0) |
| Specific Injuries n, (%) | |
| Traumatic brain injury | 679 (21) |
| Rib fracture | 683 (21) |
| Intraabdominal injury | 71 (2) |
| Spinal injury | 152 (5) |
| Pelvic fracture | 883 (28) |
| Long bone fracture | 747 (23) |
aISS = Injury Severity Score
bMVC = motor vehicle collision
cAIS = Abbreviated Injury Scale
Medical decision-making of representative and Non-representative injuries.
| Traumatic brain injury | |
| Representative | “Patient lethargic. Does not follow commands. Very little verbalization. Subdural hematoma on CT scan. I did call for transfer. I spoke to Dr. ** who has accepted the patient.” |
| Non-representative | “This is a 90-year-old female who was found to have atrial fibrillation on EKG as well as a left frontal intraparenchymal hemorrhage on head CT with subarachnoid and subdural hemorrhage. The patient was also found to have an occipital skull fracture. The patient was found to have a troponin of 0.7. The patient remained completely asymptomatic throughout her Emergency Department course. She was admitted for further evaluation and management of her intracranial bleeding and elevated troponins.” |
| Rib fracture | |
| Representative | “Chest x-ray interpreted by me showed multiple left-sided rib fractures with some possible left-sided effusion. Because of the patient's hypoxia as well as her multiple rib fractures as well as the mechanism of injury [MVC], I discussed the case with Dr.** at [trauma center] who recommended the patient be transferred to [trauma center] as a level 2 trauma.” |
| Non-representative | “CT of his chest and abdomen showed nondisplaced fractures of the 4th through the 10th left ribs and also a small pneumothorax and also mild pulmonary contusion. I spoke with Dr. **, a pulmonologist. He looked at the CT scan and decided the patient should be admitted to the hospitalist to a telemetry bed.” |
| Intraabdominal injury | |
| Representative | “Impression was that there was irregular appearance of the spleen on noncontrast images with hemoperitoneum, consistent with partial splenic rupture. I hesitate to give him additional pain medication at this time, due to his blood pressure being on the lower side. Beyond that, the patient after finding the initial splenic laceration and hemoperitoneum, had immediate consultation through Med Call Trauma Surgeon, Dr.**. She has agreed to accept the patient for transfer.” |
| Non-representative | “She has evidence of gross hematuria and what I suspect is a perinephritic versus intrarenal hematoma. I discussed the case with Dr. Woodburn who agreed to accept the patient for admission. Consult to Dr. ** of Urology. Admitted in stable condition.” |
| Pelvic fracture | |
| Representative | “Left inferior pubic rami fracture. Widening of the symphysis pubis. Acetabular disruption. His heart rate is slightly elevated. Given the severity of his injury, the mechanism of injury [MVC], and that he is anticoagulated he is better served at a trauma center. I've spoken to Dr. **, who accepted the patient in transfer.” |
| Non-representative | "This is a 62-year-old female who presents emergency room after fall from a ladder and sustained an unstable pelvis fracture. She is hemodynamically stable. Patient is being admitted to orthopedic floor under hospitalist service.” |
| Spinal injury | |
| Representative | “Based on the new C2 fracture as well as some left arm tingling, we feel it is best the patient be transferred to [trauma center] for evaluation by the trauma team and the neurosurgeons.” |
| Non-representative | “I discussed the case with the orthopedic resident to evaluate the patient. It was felt that the patient only needed a soft cervical collar and did not need to be admitted for the nondisplaced odontoid fracture.” |
| Long bone fracture | |
| Representative | “19-year-old male with a gunshot wound to the left lower extremity that has shattered the fibula. Discussed with Dr. **, Trauma surgeon at [trauma center], presently and he accepts him for transfer.” |
| Non-representative | “71-year-old female with right proximal humerus fracture and right femoral neck fracture. Discussed with patient and patient’s family, eventually to be admitted with orthopedic consultation.” |
Transfer decisions by injury and representativeness.
| Variable | Nontransfer | Transfer | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traumatic brain injury, n (%) | n = 373 | n = 306 | |
| No representative characteristics | 345 (93) | 270 (88) | 0.13 |
| Abnormal GCS | 7 (2) | 13 (4) | |
| Neurologic deficit | 16 (4) | 14 (5) | |
| Both representative characteristics | 5 (1) | 9 (3) | |
| Mechanism | 0.11 | ||
| Assault | 46 (12) | 26 (9) | |
| Crush | 1 (0) | 2 (1) | |
| Fall | 315 (84) | 261 (85) | |
| MVC | 11 (3) | 15 (5) | |
| Penetrating | 0 | 2 (1) | |
| Rib fracture, n (%) | n = 513 | n = 170 | |
| No representative characteristics | 415 (81) | 119 (70) | 0.001 |
| Hypoxia | 37 (7) | 20 (12) | |
| Hemodynamic instability | 50 (10) | 18 (10) | |
| Both representative characteristics | 11 (2) | 13 (8) | |
| Mechanism | < 0.001 | ||
| Assault | 12 (2) | 12 (7) | |
| Crush | 1 (0) | 2 (1) | |
| Fall | 469 (92) | 119 (70) | |
| MVC | 30 (6) | 30 (18) | |
| Penetrating | 1 (0) | 7 (4) | |
| Intraabdominal injury, n (%) | n = 37 | n = 34 | |
| No representative characteristics | 33 (89) | 23 (68) | 0.04 |
| Hemodynamic instability | 4 (11) | 11 (32) | |
| Mechanism | < 0.001 | ||
| Assault | 1 (3) | 5 (15) | |
| Crush | 0 | 0 | |
| Fall | 33 (89) | 13 (38) | |
| MVC | 2 (5) | 11 (32) | |
| Penetrating | 1 (3) | 5 (15) | |
| Spinal injury, n (%) | n = 78 | n = 74 | |
| No representative characteristics | 72 (92) | 67 (91) | 0.78 |
| Neurologic deficit | 6 (8) | 7 (9) | |
| Mechanism | 0.04 | ||
| Assault | 0 | 1 (1) | |
| Crush | 0 | 1 (1) | |
| Fall | 75 (96) | 63 (86) | |
| MVC | 3 (4) | 9 (12) | |
| Penetrating | 0 | 0 | |
| Pelvic fracture, n (%) | n = 842 | n = 41 | |
| No representative characteristics | 749 (89) | 37 (90) | > 0.99 |
| Hemodynamic instability | 93 (11) | 4 (10) | |
| Mechanism | < 0.001 | ||
| Assault | 3 (0) | 0 | |
| Crush | 0 | 0 | |
| Fall | 822 (98) | 30 (73) | |
| MVC | 17 (2) | 11 (27) | |
| Penetrating | 0 | 0 | |
| Long bone fracture, n (%) | 631 | 116 | |
| No representative characteristics | 569 (90) | 82 (71) | < 0.001 |
| Open fracture | 62 (10) | 34 (29) | |
| Mechanism | < 0.001 | ||
| Assault | 9 (1) | 4 (3) | |
| Crush | 92 (15) | 12 (10) | |
| Fall | 510 (81) | 84 (73) | |
| MVC | 13 (2) | 11 (10) | |
| Penetrating | 7 (1) | 5 (4) | |
| GCS = Glasgow Coma Scale; MVC = motor vehicle collision | |||
aGCS = Glasgow Coma Scale
bMVC = motor vehicle collision
Fig 2Effects of representativeness on transfer by hospital.
Boxes indicate effect of representiveness on transfer for each hospital. Box size is inversely proprotinal to the variance of each hospital effect. Lines indicate 95% confidence intervals. Diamond indicates random effects summary across hospitals.