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Preventing Post-injury Hypothermia During Prolonged Prehospital Evacuation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2012

Hans Husum*
Affiliation:
Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center (TMC), Norway
Tone Olsen
Affiliation:
Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center (TMC), Norway
Mudhafar Murad
Affiliation:
Trauma Care Foundation, North Iraq
Yang Van Heng
Affiliation:
Trauma Care Foundation, Cambodia
Torben Wisborg
Affiliation:
Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center (TMC), Norway
Mads Gilbert
Affiliation:
Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center (TMC), Norway
*
Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Center (TMC), PO Box 80, N-9038, University Hospital of Northern, Norway Email hhusum@c2i.net

Abstract

Introduction:

Post-injury hypothermia is a risk predictor in trauma patients whose physiology is deranged. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of simple, in-field, hypothermia prevention to victims of penetrating trauma during long prehospital evacuations.

Methods:

A total of 170 consecutively injured landmine victims were included in a prospective, clinical study in Northern Iraq and Cambodia. Thirty patients were provided with systematic prehospital hypothermia prevention, and for 140 patients, no preventive measures were provided.

Results:

The mean value for the time from injury to hospital admission was 6.6 hours (range: 0.2–72). The incidence of hypothermia (oral temperature <36°C) before prevention/rewarming was 21% (95% confidence interval: 15% to 28%). The Prevention Group had a statistically significant lower rate of hypothermia on hospital admission compared to the control group (95% confidence interval for difference: 6% to 24%).

Conclusion:

Simple, preventive, in-field measures help to prevent hypothermia during protracted evacuation, and should be part of the trauma care protocol in rural rescue systems.

Type
Original Research
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2002

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