Quality management principles stipulate that outcome after injury is dependent upon patient factors, injury severity, structures and processes of care in a trauma system. Structures refers to the context in which care is delivered, including material resources, equipment and competence of involved personnel. Processes refers to what is literally done by the personnel involved in patient care. In this thesis, we examine the different aspects of this conceptual model with outcome as the main focus. Historically, trauma mortality has been the standard quality outcome measure. However, nontrauma related deaths and patients that are dead on arrival (DOA) in registries, complicates the interpretation of trauma mortality statistics. ...
Background: The National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) is an invaluable resource to study trauma outcomes....
A population-based trauma register was used to develop a risk-adjustment model in order to compare m...
Background: Outcome after trauma depends on patient characteristics, quality of care, and random eve...
Quality improvement (QI) programs have shown to reduce preventable mortality in trauma care. Detaile...
Monitoring the quality of trauma care is important but particularly challenging. Preventable death a...
Objective: The main objective was to compare the 30-day mortality rate of trauma patients treated at...
In this thesis we investigated whether population-based studies with routinely collected data are el...
Introduction Injury severity measurement is integral to meaningful benchmarking and injury preventio...
Background: The manifestations associated with non-survival after multiple trauma may vary important...
Background: Monitoring the quality of trauma care is frequently done by analysing the preventability...
Background: Early identification of major trauma may contribute to timely emergency care and rapid t...
Introduction: With increased urbanisation and motorisation, trauma is emerging as one of the top t...
The main aim of this thesis is to evaluate, develop and validate models for predicting fatal and non...
Background: Valid and reliable measures of trauma system performance are needed to guide improvement...
Background: Optimum quantification of injury severity remains an imprecise science with a need for i...
Background: The National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) is an invaluable resource to study trauma outcomes....
A population-based trauma register was used to develop a risk-adjustment model in order to compare m...
Background: Outcome after trauma depends on patient characteristics, quality of care, and random eve...
Quality improvement (QI) programs have shown to reduce preventable mortality in trauma care. Detaile...
Monitoring the quality of trauma care is important but particularly challenging. Preventable death a...
Objective: The main objective was to compare the 30-day mortality rate of trauma patients treated at...
In this thesis we investigated whether population-based studies with routinely collected data are el...
Introduction Injury severity measurement is integral to meaningful benchmarking and injury preventio...
Background: The manifestations associated with non-survival after multiple trauma may vary important...
Background: Monitoring the quality of trauma care is frequently done by analysing the preventability...
Background: Early identification of major trauma may contribute to timely emergency care and rapid t...
Introduction: With increased urbanisation and motorisation, trauma is emerging as one of the top t...
The main aim of this thesis is to evaluate, develop and validate models for predicting fatal and non...
Background: Valid and reliable measures of trauma system performance are needed to guide improvement...
Background: Optimum quantification of injury severity remains an imprecise science with a need for i...
Background: The National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) is an invaluable resource to study trauma outcomes....
A population-based trauma register was used to develop a risk-adjustment model in order to compare m...
Background: Outcome after trauma depends on patient characteristics, quality of care, and random eve...