The aim of this study was to analyze data from the Danish helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) database, focusing on patients undergoing a secondary transfer from district general hospitals (DGHs) to university hospitals within 24 hours of the initial emergency call. Methods: This is a national population-based study analyzing HEMS patients undergoing a secondary transfer between October 1, 2014, and April 30, 2018. Results: Fifty-three (2.9%) of the 1,846 patients initially triaged to a DGH by the HEMS team required a secondary transfer. These 53 patients constituted 0.7% of all 7,133 patients seen by the HEMS teams during the study period. More than 60% of these patients were initially treated for either a cardiovascular or a neurologic emergency. HEMS-escorted patients had a mortality rate at day 30 of 14.3% (95% confidence interval, 4.8-38.0), and the HEMS-assisted group had a mortality rate at day 30 of 3.1% (95% CI, 0.5-20.2). Conclusion: Patients initially triaged to a DGH by the HEMS teams seldomly required a secondary transfer, indicating a low degree of prehospital undertriage for direct transfer to a university hospital. Cardiovascular or neurologic emergencies were the major reasons for transportation. Mortality seems comparable with that in the general population of patients treated by the Danish HEMS teams.
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