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Published in: European Radiology 8/2009

01-08-2009 | Emergency Radiology

Evaluation of a CT triage protocol for mass casualty incidents: results from two large-scale exercises

Authors: Markus Körner, Michael M. Krötz, Stefan Wirth, Stefan Huber-Wagner, Karl-Georg Kanz, Holger F. Boehm, Maximilian Reiser, Ulrich Linsenmaier

Published in: European Radiology | Issue 8/2009

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility, stability, and reproducibility of a dedicated CT protocol for the triage of patients in two separate large-scale exercises that simulated a mass casualty incident (MCI). In both exercises, a bomb explosion at the local soccer stadium that had caused about 100 casualties was simulated. Seven casualties who were rated “critical” by on-site field triage were admitted to the emergency department and underwent whole-body CT. The CT workflow was simulated with phantoms. The history of the casualties was matched to existing CT examinations that were used for evaluation of image reading under MCI conditions. The times needed for transfer and preparation of patients, examination, image reconstruction, total time in the CT examination room, image transfer to PACS, and image reading were recorded, and mean capacities were calculated and compared using the Mann–Whitney U test. We found no significant time differences in transfer and preparation of patients, duration of CT data acquisition, image reconstruction, total time in the CT room, and reading of the images. The calculated capacities per hour were 9.4 vs. 9.8 for examinations completed, and 8.2 vs. 7.2 for reports completed. In conclusion, CT triage is feasible and produced constant results with this dedicated and fast protocol.
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Metadata
Title
Evaluation of a CT triage protocol for mass casualty incidents: results from two large-scale exercises
Authors
Markus Körner
Michael M. Krötz
Stefan Wirth
Stefan Huber-Wagner
Karl-Georg Kanz
Holger F. Boehm
Maximilian Reiser
Ulrich Linsenmaier
Publication date
01-08-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
European Radiology / Issue 8/2009
Print ISSN: 0938-7994
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1084
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-009-1361-2

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