Surgical Diagnoses Presented in the Emergency Room
Abstract
bstract
Degree Project, Programme in Medicine, Surgical Diagnoses Presented in the Emergency
Room - A cross-sectional study in two tertiary hospitals in Kathmandu, Nepal, Emma
Haskovec, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, May 2017.
Supervisors: Prof. Göran Kurlberg and Prof. Pratap Narayan Prasad
Background: The surgical diagnoses presented in the emergency room range from symptoms
in need of surgical treatment to traumas after various forms of accidents. A better
understanding of the conditions that drive patients to seek acute care in low-and middleincome
countries (LMICs) is crucial to strengthen emergency care in those countries.
Aim: This study aimed to describe the most common surgical diagnoses presented in the
emergency room of Nepal and to investigate if gender affected the type of surgical diagnosis
(traumatic/non-traumatic) or the management of the patients.
Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in the emergency room of two tertiary
level hospitals in Kathmandu, Nepal. The study population consisted of 1787 emergency
patients with surgical diagnoses, diagnosed in March 2017. Information regarding age,
gender, district of origin, triage, diagnosis and management were collected from ledgers,
triage area records and medical records. Then, all doctor-assigned diagnoses were
retrospectively classified using the Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) for International
Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) in order to group diagnoses into
clinically meaningful categorise.
Results: The three most common surgical diagnoses were superficial injury; contusion,
calculus of urinary tract and fracture of upper limb. The frequency varied by gender, with the
addition of gynaecological diagnoses for females, and a significant difference regarding
traumatic diagnoses. Significantly more males than females suffered from traumatic injuries,
p <0.0001. Additionally, females were more probable to be discharged than males, p = 0.005.
Conclusion: This data suggests that type of surgical diagnosis (traumatic/non-traumatic) vary
by gender, partly due to different spectrums of diagnoses. Thus, a better understanding of the
surgical emergencies that physicians encounter has been provided through this study, which
could help future research, prioritization of resources and development of the emergency
department.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2017-10-31Author
Haskovec, Emma
Keywords
Emergency care, surgical conditions, trauma, demographics, Nepal
Language
eng