2016
The ‘Mortality Ascent’: Risk of Death for Hemodynamically-Unstable Trauma Patients at Level II vs Level I Trauma Centers Rises at 4 Hours and Peaks at 7 Hours after Admission
Herrera-Escobar J, Rios-Diaz A, Chowdhury R, Zogg C, Wolf L, Olufajo O, Schneider E, Ordonez C, Cooper Z, Haider A. The ‘Mortality Ascent’: Risk of Death for Hemodynamically-Unstable Trauma Patients at Level II vs Level I Trauma Centers Rises at 4 Hours and Peaks at 7 Hours after Admission. Journal Of The American College Of Surgeons 2016, 223: e55. DOI: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2016.08.157.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2014
Benchmarking trauma centers on mortality alone does not reflect quality of care
Hashmi Z, Schneider E, Castillo R, Haut E, Zafar S, Cornwell E, MacKenzie E, Latif A, Haider A. Benchmarking trauma centers on mortality alone does not reflect quality of care. Journal Of Trauma And Acute Care Surgery 2014, 76: 1184-1191. PMID: 24747447, DOI: 10.1097/ta.0000000000000215.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedBenchmarkingCause of DeathDatabases, FactualFemaleHealth Care SurveysHospital MortalityHumansInjury Severity ScoreMaleMiddle AgedQuality of Health CareReimbursement, IncentiveRisk AdjustmentSensitivity and SpecificitySurvival AnalysisTrauma CentersUnited StatesWounds and InjuriesWounds, NonpenetratingWounds, PenetratingYoung AdultConceptsInjury Severity ScoreTrauma centerNational Trauma Data BankPatients 16 yearsHigh complication rateRisk of deathTrauma Data BankHospital performance rankingsQuality of careUnadjusted morbidityPerformance statusComplication rateMajor complicationsMorbidity outcomesMortality outcomesSeverity scoreMorbidity ratioMortality ratioEpidemiologic studiesMorbidityMorbidity analysisMortality rateLevel IIIPoor concordanceComplications