ABCs of scoring systems for pédiatrie trauma

Ronald A. Furnival, Jeff E. Schunk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

This review presents an overview of scoring systems used in pé diatrie and adult trauma. Triage scoring systems, using readily available physical examination, physiologic, and/or mechanism of injury parameters, are used to determine appropriate prehospital referral patterns. The Trauma Score, Revised Trauma Score, Circulation/Respiration/Abdomen/Motor/Speech Scale, Prehospital Index, and Trauma Triage Rule were reviewed. Injury scoring systems based upon anatomic descriptions of all identified injuries, are retrospectively used to analyze trauma populations. The Abbreviated Injury Scale, Injury Severity Score, Modified Injury Severity Score, Organ Injury Scaling, and Anatomic Profile were discussed. The two trauma outcome analysis systems presented, TRISS and ASCOT, allow for reproducible quantification of trauma severity, and survival comparison between trauma populations. Many of these triage, injury severity, and outcome analysis systems were developed with patient survival as the major outcome variable. Although subsequent studies may have found them to have some predictive value for measures of trauma morbidity, these scoring systems do not specifically address long-term risk of impairment, and therefore overlook one of the most crucial elements of pédiatrie trauma care. The last 2 decades have seen considerable development of scoring systems and analysis methods applicable to the trauma patient. As presented, this trend includes both the elaboration of increasingly simple, field-oriented triage tools, and more complex mathematical techniques for trauma outcome analysis. Although not all systems were designed specifically with the pédiatrie patient in mind, validation or modification of these systems for the pédiatrie patient will likely occur in the future. It is anticipated that this field will continue to evolve with greater mathematical sophistication; a baseline familiarity of the early stages of this evolution may be of benefit to those caring for the pédiatrie trauma patient.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)215-223
Number of pages9
JournalPediatric Emergency Care
Volume15
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1999

Keywords

  • Injury severity
  • Trauma image
  • Trauma outcome

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'ABCs of scoring systems for pédiatrie trauma'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this