Patient perspectives on the promptness and quality of care of road traffic incident victims in Peru: a cross-sectional, active surveillance study

Road injuries are the second-leading cause of disease and injury in the Andean region of South America. Adequate management of road traffic crash victims is important to prevent and reduce deaths and serious long-term injuries. To evaluate the promptness of health care services provided to those inj...

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Published in:F1000 research Vol. 2; p. 167
Main Authors: Miranda, J Jaime, Rosales-Mayor, Edmundo, Quistberg, D Alex, Paca-Palao, Ada, Gianella, Camila, Perel, Pablo, Lopez, Luis, Luna, Diego, Best, Pablo, Huicho, Luis
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England F1000Research 2013
F1000 Research Ltd
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Summary:Road injuries are the second-leading cause of disease and injury in the Andean region of South America. Adequate management of road traffic crash victims is important to prevent and reduce deaths and serious long-term injuries. To evaluate the promptness of health care services provided to those injured in road traffic incidents (RTIs) and the satisfaction with those services during the pre-hospital and hospital periods. We conducted a cross-sectional study with active surveillance to recruit participants in emergency departments at eight health care facilities in three Peruvian cities: a large metropolitan city (Lima) and two provincial cities (an urban center in the southern Andes and an urban center in the rainforest region), between August and September 2009. The main outcomes of interest were promptness of care, measured by time between injury and each service offered, as well as patient satisfaction measured by the Service Quality (SERVQUAL) survey. We explored the association between outcomes and city, type of health care facility (HCF), and type of provider. We recruited 644 adults seeking care for RTIs. This active surveillance strategy yielded 34% more events than anticipated, suggesting under-reporting in traditional registries. Median response time between a RTI and any care at a HCF was 33 minutes overall and only 62% of participants received professional care during the initial "golden" hour after the RTI. After adjustment for various factors, there was strong evidence of higher global dissatisfaction levels among those receiving care at public HCFs compared to private ones (odds ratio (OR) 5.05, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.88-13.54). This difference was not observed when provincial sites were compared to Lima (OR 1.41, 95% CI 0.42-4.70). Response time to RTIs was adequate overall, though a large proportion of RTI victims could have received more prompt care. Overall, dissatisfaction was high, mainly at public institutions indicating much need for improvements in service provision.
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JJM and LH obtained funding for the study. JJM, ERM and LH designed the study. JJM, ERM, DAQ and LH participated in the literature search. ERM reviewed and pilot tested the instruments. JJM, ERM, APP, LL, DL and LH carried out the research. JJM, ERM and LL analyzed the data. JJM, ERM and DAQ prepared the first draft of the manuscript. DAQ, CG, PP and PB provided critical input during the preparation of the manuscript. All authors were involved in the revision of the draft manuscript and have agreed to the final content.
Competing interests: No competing interests were disclosed.
ISSN:2046-1402
2046-1402
DOI:10.12688/f1000research.2-167.v1