Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda

Introduction: Traumatic injuries and their resulting mortality and disability impose a disproportionate burden on sub-Saharan countries like Rwanda. An important facet of addressing injury burdens is to comprehend injury patterns and aetiologies of trauma. This study is a cross-sectional analysis of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saadiyah Bilal, Jean Paul Nzabandora, Doris Lorette Uwamahoro, Lars Meisner, Subhanik Purkayastha, Adam R. Aluisio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000197
id doaj-1ba3e386ef044745b6304bea0056f9e7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1ba3e386ef044745b6304bea0056f9e72021-05-26T04:26:06ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2021-06-01112299302Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, RwandaSaadiyah Bilal0Jean Paul Nzabandora1Doris Lorette Uwamahoro2Lars Meisner3Subhanik Purkayastha4Adam R. Aluisio5Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Department of Emergency Medicine, New York, 10029, USA; Corresponding author.Ruhengeri Referral Hospital, Musanze District, Musanze, RwandaDepartment of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Rwanda, RwandaBrown University Warren Alpert Medical School, Department of Emergency Medicine, 222 Richmond Street, Providence, RI 02912, USABrown University, 69 Brown Street, Providence, RI 02912, USABrown University Warren Alpert Medical School, Department of Emergency Medicine, 222 Richmond Street, Providence, RI 02912, USAIntroduction: Traumatic injuries and their resulting mortality and disability impose a disproportionate burden on sub-Saharan countries like Rwanda. An important facet of addressing injury burdens is to comprehend injury patterns and aetiologies of trauma. This study is a cross-sectional analysis of injuries, treatments and outcomes at the University Teaching Hospital-Kigali (CHUK). Methods: A random sample of Emergency Centre (EC) injury patients presenting during August 2015 through July 2016 was accrued. Patients were excluded if they had non-traumatic illness. Data included demographics, clinical presentation, injury type(s), mechanism of injury, and EC disposition. Descriptive statics were utilised to explore characteristics of the population. Results: A random sample of 786 trauma patients met inclusion criteria and were analysed. The median age was 28 (IQR 6–50) years and 69.4% were male. Of all trauma patients 49.4% presented secondary to road traffic injuries (RTIs), 23.9% due to falls, 10.9% due to penetrating trauma. Craniofacial trauma was the most frequent traumatic injury location at 36.3%. Lower limb trauma and upper limb trauma constituted 35.8% and 27.1% of all injuries. Admission was required in 68.2% of cases, 23.3% were admitted to the orthopaedic service with the second highest admission to the surgical service (19.2%). Of those admitted to the hospital, the median LOS was 6 days (IQR 3–14), in the subset of patients requiring operative intervention, the median LOS was also 6 days (IQR 3–16). Death occurred in 5.5% of admitted patients in the hospital. Conclusion: The traumatic injury burden is borne more proportionally by young males in Kigali, Rwanda. Blunt trauma accounts for a majority of trauma patient presentations; of these RTIs constitute nearly half the injury mechanisms. These findings suggest that this population has substantial injury burdens and prevention and care interventions focused in this demographic group could provide positive impacts in the study setting.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000197RwandaTraumaInjury preventionInjury secondary surveyLMICLow and middle-income country
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saadiyah Bilal
Jean Paul Nzabandora
Doris Lorette Uwamahoro
Lars Meisner
Subhanik Purkayastha
Adam R. Aluisio
spellingShingle Saadiyah Bilal
Jean Paul Nzabandora
Doris Lorette Uwamahoro
Lars Meisner
Subhanik Purkayastha
Adam R. Aluisio
Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Rwanda
Trauma
Injury prevention
Injury secondary survey
LMIC
Low and middle-income country
author_facet Saadiyah Bilal
Jean Paul Nzabandora
Doris Lorette Uwamahoro
Lars Meisner
Subhanik Purkayastha
Adam R. Aluisio
author_sort Saadiyah Bilal
title Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
title_short Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
title_full Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
title_fullStr Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in Kigali, Rwanda
title_sort cross-sectional survey of treatments and outcomes among injured adult patients in kigali, rwanda
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Introduction: Traumatic injuries and their resulting mortality and disability impose a disproportionate burden on sub-Saharan countries like Rwanda. An important facet of addressing injury burdens is to comprehend injury patterns and aetiologies of trauma. This study is a cross-sectional analysis of injuries, treatments and outcomes at the University Teaching Hospital-Kigali (CHUK). Methods: A random sample of Emergency Centre (EC) injury patients presenting during August 2015 through July 2016 was accrued. Patients were excluded if they had non-traumatic illness. Data included demographics, clinical presentation, injury type(s), mechanism of injury, and EC disposition. Descriptive statics were utilised to explore characteristics of the population. Results: A random sample of 786 trauma patients met inclusion criteria and were analysed. The median age was 28 (IQR 6–50) years and 69.4% were male. Of all trauma patients 49.4% presented secondary to road traffic injuries (RTIs), 23.9% due to falls, 10.9% due to penetrating trauma. Craniofacial trauma was the most frequent traumatic injury location at 36.3%. Lower limb trauma and upper limb trauma constituted 35.8% and 27.1% of all injuries. Admission was required in 68.2% of cases, 23.3% were admitted to the orthopaedic service with the second highest admission to the surgical service (19.2%). Of those admitted to the hospital, the median LOS was 6 days (IQR 3–14), in the subset of patients requiring operative intervention, the median LOS was also 6 days (IQR 3–16). Death occurred in 5.5% of admitted patients in the hospital. Conclusion: The traumatic injury burden is borne more proportionally by young males in Kigali, Rwanda. Blunt trauma accounts for a majority of trauma patient presentations; of these RTIs constitute nearly half the injury mechanisms. These findings suggest that this population has substantial injury burdens and prevention and care interventions focused in this demographic group could provide positive impacts in the study setting.
topic Rwanda
Trauma
Injury prevention
Injury secondary survey
LMIC
Low and middle-income country
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X21000197
work_keys_str_mv AT saadiyahbilal crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
AT jeanpaulnzabandora crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
AT dorisloretteuwamahoro crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
AT larsmeisner crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
AT subhanikpurkayastha crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
AT adamraluisio crosssectionalsurveyoftreatmentsandoutcomesamonginjuredadultpatientsinkigalirwanda
_version_ 1721426591341346816