Preventable injury deaths: identifying opportunities to improve timeliness and reach of emergency healthcare services in New Zealand

Author:

Lilley Rebbecca,Kool Bridget,Davie Gabrielle,de Graaf Brandon,Ameratunga Shanthi N,Reid Pararangi,Civil Ian,Dicker Bridget,Branas Charles C

Abstract

BackgroundTraumatic injury is a leading cause of premature death and health loss in New Zealand. Outcomes following injury are very time sensitive, and timely access of critically injured patients to advanced hospital trauma care services can improve injury survival.ObjectiveThis cross-sectional study will investigate the epidemiology and geographic location of prehospital fatal injury deaths in relation to access to prehospital emergency services for the first time in New Zealand.Design and study populationElectronic Coronial case files for the period 2008–2012 will be reviewed to identify cases of prehospital fatal injury across New Zealand.MethodsThe project will combine epidemiological and geospatial methods in three research phases: (1) identification, enumeration, description and geocoding of prehospital injury deaths using existing electronic injury data sets; (2) geocoding of advanced hospital-level care providers and emergency land and air ambulance services to determine the current theoretical service coverage in a specified time period and (3) synthesising of information from phases I and II using geospatial methods to determine the number of prehospital injury deaths located in areas without timely access to advanced-level hospital care.DiscussionThe findings of this research will identify opportunities to optimise access to advanced-level hospital care in New Zealand to increase the chances of survival from serious injury. The resulting epidemiological and geospatial analyses will represent an advancement of knowledge for injury prevention and health service quality improvement towards better patient outcomes following serious injury in New Zealand and similar countries.

Funder

Health Research Council of New Zealand

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference27 articles.

1. Ministry of Health and Accident Compensation Corporation. Injury related health loss: a report from the New Zealand Burden of Disease, Injuries and Risk Factors Study 2006–2016. Wellington, New Zealand: Ministry of Health, 2013.

2. Ministry of Health. Mātātuhi Tuawhenua: Health of Rural Māori 2012. Wellington, New Zealand: Ministry of Health, 2012.

3. O'Dea D . New Zealand estimates of the total social and economic costs of injury. For all injuries and the six priority areas. Wellington, New Zealand: New Zealand Injury Prevention Strategy, 2012.

4. Evidence for quality indicators to evaluate adult trauma care: A systematic review*

5. A systematic review of quality indicators for evaluating pediatric trauma care;Stelfox;Crit Care Med,2010

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