| Literature DB >> 32025261 |
Elham Sepahvand1, Hamidreza Khankeh2,3, Mohammadali Hosseini1, Behnam Akhbari4.
Abstract
The injury management in the acute phase of spinal cord injury starts at the accident scene and focuses on preventing and reducing secondary damages. The road traffic injured patients are mostly transferred by relatives, untrained laypeople, and the drivers of heavy vehicles. The current study explored the experience of people with spinal cord injury in the accident scene. This was a qualitative content analysis study using the semi-structured interviewing method with an interview guide for data collection. Purposive sampling method was performed within ten months until data saturation. We used the constant comparative approach recommended by Corbin and Strauss (2015). In total, 15 people with spinal cord injury and bystanders participated in this study. The central theme extracted in this study was "emotional interaction" that referred to the emotional reactions in managing road traffic victims. Two main categories of "emotional intervention" with "emotional atmosphere," "desperation," "rescue efforts," subcategories and "scene shock" with "unplanned intervention," "emotional behavior," "emotional decisions," and "emotional involvement," subcategories were classified. The emotional atmosphere of the scene and stress level of the victim and the relatives, and the insistence of the victim to escape from the harsh condition have caused those lacking medical knowledge and expertise to transfer the patient unsafely. This resulted in secondary damages, like aggravated spinal cord injury or even caused the spinal cord injury. ©Carol Davila University Press.Entities:
Keywords: Content analysis; Emotional interaction; Qualitative study; Road traffic injury; Spinal cord injury
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 32025261 PMCID: PMC6993283 DOI: 10.25122/jml-2019-0078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Life ISSN: 1844-122X
Characteristics of participants.
| Rank | Participant | Age | Sex | Duration of interview | Interview place |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | C1 | 32 | Male | 35 | Hospital |
| 2 | C2 | 18 | Male | 40 | Hospital |
| 3 | C3 | 50 | Male | 25 | Hospital |
| 4 | C4 | 22 | Male | 30 | Hospital |
| 5 | C5 | 22 | Female | 30 | Rehabilitation center |
| 6 | C6 | 36 | Female | 28 | Rehabilitation center |
| 7 | C7 | 19 | Female | 35 | Rehabilitation center |
| 8 | H1 | 28 | Male | 36 | Hospital |
| 9 | H2 | 50 | Male | 40 | Rehabilitation center |
| 10 | H3 | 28 | Female | 28 | Hospital |
| 11 | H4 | 26 | Female | 29 | Rehabilitation center |
| 12 | C8 | 32 | Female | 31 | Rehabilitation center |
| 13 | C9 | 18 | Male | 33 | Hospital |
| 14 | L1 | 50 | Male | 36 | Rehabilitation center |
| 15 | L2 | 33 | Male | 27 | Rehabilitation center |
Codes, subcategory, category, and extracted themes.
| Emotional interaction | Emotional intervention | Unplanned interventions | The lack of protection |
| Unprotected transfer | |||
| Unstable condition of the injured | |||
| Taking the injured away from the incident scene | |||
| Emotional behaviors | Violence to the emergency forces | ||
| Insisting on pulling the injured | |||
| Insisting on a quick rescue | |||
| Emotional dissonance | |||
| Insisting on transferring the injured | |||
| Emotional decisions | Hastiness | ||
| The lack of emergency contact | |||
| Transferring the injured with private cars | |||
| Taking non-secure transfer actions | |||
| Emotional involvement | Intervention for rescuers | ||
| Rescue contribution without permission | |||
| Gathering in the scene and blocking the way | |||
| Intervention with a sense of being a savior | |||
| Scene Shock | Rescue efforts | Fear of secondary incidents | |
| The urge to rescue | |||
| Unstable position | |||
| Blaming oneself | |||
| Desperation | Unrestless of the injured | ||
| The urge to rescue the injured | |||
| Severity of injury | |||
| Emotional atmosphere | Inability to manage emotions | ||
| Stress of bystanders | |||
| Emotion of relief |