Injury and death from electric current although rare, are not uncommon. In majority of the fatalities, death usually results from accidental contact with a live wire, both in industrial and domestic circumstances. The entry wound is usually in the hand or foot, with the exit wound being in the opposite hand or foot touching the earth (or the ground). Rarely, due to a unique position of the body and circumstances, they may be seen on head, face, neck, mouth, lips, body trunk, etc. However, here we present a unique site of electrocution, the eye, which has probably never been reported before. This case was also accidental in nature.
The rationale behind a regionalized trauma system is that patient outcomes are improved when trauma patients are rapidly transported to facilities with the level of expertise need to treat their injury. Functioning as an adult Level II trauma center, we wanted to know how the transfer process worked for pediatric patients whom we transfer to a Level I pediatric trauma center, which is part of the same multihospital system. Complete information on time of arrival, the time the transfer was accepted, and patient departure time were available for 116 patients (72% of pediatric patients transferred) for the period of January 1, 1997 through June 30, 1998. Patients were retrospectively stratified into two priority groups representing differing transport priority, based on use of a nasogastric tube, endotracheal tube or Foley catheter. Means for decision time and total time in transferring hospital were inspected. Decision time was 44 minutes (standard error 4.5 minutes) for priority patients and 92 minutes (11.5) for non-priority patients (t = 2.94, df = 114, P = 0.004). Total time for priority patients was 129 minutes (7.6) and 197 minutes (14.0) for non-priority patients (t = 3.37, df = 114, P = 0.001). Decision time was not influenced by extensive injury assessment or secondary studies. On average, pediatric patients spent nearly three hours in our facility. Our data indicate that a shorter decision time did not necessarily result in a reduction in wait time. Improving pediatric transfer times requires attention not only to injury assessment processes at the transferring facility and interhospital communications but also mobilization, hand-over, and any space or personnel constraints at the receiving pediatric facility.
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