PATTERN OF INJURY, OUTCOME AND ASSOCIATED FACTORS AMONG PATIENTS VISITING THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT IN SIDAMA REGIONAL GENERAL HOSPITALS, ETHIOPIA; 2023.
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Date
2023-11
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hawassa universty
Abstract
Background: Injury has a significant impact on societal health and well-being, taking the lives
of more than 15,000 people daily and more than 4.4 million people annually. Low- and middle
income countries have a disproportionately high injury burden, account for almost 90% of
injury-related fatalities. Despite government health agencies and hospitals should have a
detailed picture of injuries, little is known about injury statistics and outcomes in this region
and across the country.
Objectives: To assess pattern of injury, outcome, and associated factors of injury outcome
Among patients visited selected general hospitals in Sidama regional state, Ethiopia, 2023.
Methodology: An institutional-based cross-sectional study was conducted on Sidama
Regional General Hospitals from March 10 to June 10, 2023, after three general hospitals were
selected by the lottery method out of five general hospitals. The sample size was calculated
by using the single population formula, and it became 342. Data was collected using a
structured questionnaire adopted from WHO trauma surveillance, and ethical clearance was
obtained from Hawassa University's ethical review board. Data was entered into EpiData
version 4.1 and analyzed through SPSS version 27.
Result: A total of 342 injured patients participated in this study, and unintentional injuries
accounted for 225 (65.2%) of the total injuries, and the age group 24-44 years was the most
commonly affected, with 137 (40.1%). 35.6% of injury cases were due to road traffic injuries,
and 27.19% of the cases were due to interpersonal violence. Out of the total participants,
96.2% were discharged alive, and 3.8% died. The glaucoma scale, severity of injury , time
between injury and care, head injury, triage scale, and operated on have associations with
mortality.
Conclusion and recommendation: Male patients and those aged 25–44 had a higher
proportion of injury victims. The primary cause of injury was RTA, followed by interpersonal
violence and fall injuries. The glaucoma scale, severity of injury, triage scale, head injury, and
those patients who operated were more associated with mortality. More efforts are needed to
raise awareness of RTA, improve road safety, and impose severe regulations on pedestrians
and drivers.
Description
Keywords
injury, emergency department, Sidama, Ethiopia
