1996
DOI: 10.1136/emj.13.4.248
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Prehospital deaths in the Yorkshire Health Region.

Abstract: These data were reviewed independently by an orthopaedic surgeon, an accident and emergency physician, a neurosurgeon, and an anaesthetist. Each, while blinded to the opinions of the other reviewers, gave an opinion as to whether the patient could have survived their injuries, given cardiopulmonary care by general public bystanders and prehospital care by a trained paramedic team. The deaths were categorised into "potential survivor", "definite death", and "unclear/insufficient information".The four sets of in… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…In another study about pre-hospital deaths performed by Limb et al (8) in the Yorkshire health region, the mean age of instant death was higher in comparison to our study. Also, the mean age difference in our study (about 8 years) was higher than similar studies including Limb's study in England, which had a 1 year difference (8).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
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“…In another study about pre-hospital deaths performed by Limb et al (8) in the Yorkshire health region, the mean age of instant death was higher in comparison to our study. Also, the mean age difference in our study (about 8 years) was higher than similar studies including Limb's study in England, which had a 1 year difference (8).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
“…Also, the mean age difference in our study (about 8 years) was higher than similar studies including Limb's study in England, which had a 1 year difference (8). In this study, 83.8% of traumatic patient deaths were due to traffic accidents, 1.9% from hard material crashes, 10.6% from falling from heights, 1.9% from explosions, 1.2% from a penetrating wound and 0.6% from other mechanisms.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 51%
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“…The aim in a well-organized emergency medical service is to drive towards a reduced percentage of preventable deaths [6]. A total of 144 cases of BID captured in this study despite its limitations are reflective of the inadequacies inherent in the pre-hospital care in Nigeria as well as in Lagos State even though Lagos is still the only state with an ambulance transport system in operation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%