1.Design and practice of medical service for the main venue of the 19th Hangzhou Asian Games
Yong’an XU ; Sunan ZHU ; Jia FENG ; Minfei YANG ; Peilin WU ; Junyi LI ; Weihua GUAN ; Shanxiang XU
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2024;33(1):110-114
Objective:To clarify the medical security plan and its practical effects at the main venue of the 19th Hangzhou Asian Games.Methods:The plan described the medical security implementation plan of the main venue of the 19th Asian Games in Hangzhou (organizational management and operation mechanism, medical security operation system, standardized training and support processes, application of Asian Games intelligent first aid security system, and so on). And through high-facticity simulation verify the operation effect of the main venue's medical support (team mode and response time). Finally, the feasibility and effectiveness of the medical security program verified through the effect of medical services (quantity, disease types, transfers, etc.) during the Asian Games and Asian Paralympic Games.Results:The medical security team of the main venue of the 19th Hangzhou Asian Games included the management team and the operation team, of which consisted of 44 medical staffs (22 doctors and 22 nurses); and were deployed to 16 different security positions. It was also accompanied with 16 volunteers to assist medical staff to transport patients. In addition, a total of 300 medical observers were enrolled in audience area to assist rapid identification, intervention, and collaborative diagnosis and treatment with the medical team. Medical security teams were arranged to cover all the audience areas who can arrive at the patient's area within 2 minutes after receiving orders, transfer the patient to the ambulance’s site in 8 minutes, and transport the patient to a designated hospital within 10-20 minutes. During the Asian Games and Asian Paralympic Games, the medical-care team treated a total of 3 742 patients, including 9 patients transported from medical service sites of the audience area to the stadium infirmary, as well as 83 patients referred to the designated hospital.Conclusions:The medical security implementation plan for the main venues of the Asian Games provides good medical security for the Asian Games and Asian Paralympic Games. It also provides theoretical and practical experience for the development of the medical security system for international events in future.
2.Value of hypocalcaemia for predicting trauma-induced coagulopathy in elderly trauma patients
Yangbo KANG ; Jiaqi ZHOU ; Yufeng HU ; Yuchen JIN ; Qi YANG ; Jiasheng SHEN ; Yong’an XU
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2022;31(5):603-607
Objective:To investigate the value of hypocalcaemia for predicting trauma-induced coagulopathy (TIC) in elderly trauma patients.Methods:The clinical data of elderly trauma patients in emergency ICU of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from January 2015 to September 2020 were retrospectively analyzed, including age, sex, site of injury, injury severity score (ISS), Glasgow coma scale (GCS), admission arterial blood gas analysis (Ca 2+, K +), venous blood biochemical electrolyte (Ca 2+, K +, Na +); international normalized ratio (INR), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), prothrombin time (PT), fibrinogen (FIB), use of blood products, length of stay, length of stay in ICU, total cost, and clinical prognosis. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and multivariate logistic regression analysis were performed to estimate the contribution of hypocalcaemia to triggering TIC in elderly trauma patients. Results:Totally 371 elderly trauma patients were included with a mean age of (72.5±6.8) years, and 248 (66.8%) were male. ISS score of the TIC group was higher than that of the non-TIC group [25(20, 34) vs. 21(16, 29)]. Compared with the non-TIC group, the incidence of chest injury, abdominal injury and limb injury were significantly higher , while the incidence of head and neck injury were significantly lower in the TIC group (all P<0.05). The biochemical blood calcium in the TIC group was significantly lower than that in the non-TIC group [(1.97±0.19) mmol/L vs. (2.15±0.16) mmol/L, P<0.001], but there was no significant difference in blood gas calcium between the two groups. The APTT value of the TIC group [(47.6±21.8) s vs. (33.8±4.1) s], PT value [(18.0±3.9) s vs. (13.7±0.8) s] were significantly higher than that of the non-TIC group, and FIB level was significantly lower than that of the non-TIC group[(1.7±0.8) g/L vs. (2.8±0.9) g/L] (all P<0.01). The utilization rate of blood products and the total cost in the TIC group were higher than that in the non-TIC group, while the recovery rate in the TIC group was lower than that in the non-TIC group (69.8% vs. 86.4%, P<0.001). Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that hypocalcaemia was an independent risk factor for TIC in elderly trauma patients ( OR=5.830, 95% CI: 3.295-10.314). The area under ROC curve of correlation between biochemical calcium and TIC was 0.779 (95% CI: 0.728-0.831). The optimal diagnostic cut-off value was 2.06 mmol/L. Conclusions:The decrease of biochemical serum calcium level is an independent risk factor for TIC in elderly trauma patients. Positive correction of TIC in elderly trauma patients contributes to continuous improvement of clinical prognosis.