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Elderly trauma victims whose care is shared between surgeons and physicians have improved clinical outcomes and shorter hospital lengths of stay (LOS). To test whether a similar benefit can be gained for patients suffering traumatic brain injury (TBI), a quality improvement project (QIP) was run in which a neurologist was enrolled into the pre-existing neurotrauma team. Mortality rates, LOS and rates of readmission within 30 days of discharge were compared between two cohorts of TBI patients: 80 admittedly prior to the QIP and 80 admitted during the QIP. The two cohorts were well matched for age, gender, mechanism of injury, Glasgow coma score and types of injury. The QIP was not associated with a reduction in mortality but was associated with a significant reduction in mean LOS (from 25.7 days to 17.5 days; p=0.04) and a reduction in readmissions (from seven to zero patients; p=0.01).

More information Original publication

DOI

10.7861/clinmed.2022-0290

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2022-11-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

22

Pages

566 - 569

Total pages

3

Keywords

TBI, head injury, quality improvement, Humans, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Length of Stay, Hospitalization, Surgeons