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1.
Pan Afr Med J ; 19: 159, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25780490

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Road traffic injury (RTI) has assumed major public health importance world-wide and the burden is heavier on the health-care infrastructure of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. In Nigeria, RTI is the leading cause of trauma related morbidity and mortality. While there are some published epidemiological reports on RTI in the region, studies on the mechanism of causation of road traffic crashes (RTC) are not available. METHODS: Over a 9-month period, we prospectively captured the 571 victims of RTC presenting to a single tertiary health care center in Nigeria. Data collected include demographic data, Mechanism of causation of RTC, Injuries sustained and outcomes. RESULTS: Over three-quarters of the victims are young people and half were either traders (27.5%) or students (20%). Pedestrians, motorcycle riders and open truck occupants (people sitting at the rear loading compartment of trucks) often had fatal injuries. Analysis of collision patterns showed that lone crashes were the most frequent though car-to-motorcycle crashes caused a quarter of the deaths. Host factors (over-speeding driver, driver misjudgment, sleeping driver etc.) were responsible for four-fifths of the crashes while vehicular and environmental factors accounted for the remaining. On binary regression analysis, head injured victims had higher odds of dying than the non-head injured (Odds ratio = 6.5). CONCLUSION: This paper elucidates the mechanisms of causation of and types of injuries sustained following RTC in Nigeria and thus provide opportunities for prevention and control of this unacceptable situation.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Craniocerebral Trauma/epidemiology , Accidents, Traffic/mortality , Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Child , Child, Preschool , Craniocerebral Trauma/etiology , Craniocerebral Trauma/mortality , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , Nigeria/epidemiology , Regression Analysis , Risk Factors , Young Adult
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 19(6): 1039-42, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22798477

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Health records are essential for good health care. Their quality depends on accurate and prompt documentation of the care provided and regular analysis of content. This study assessed the quantitative properties of inpatient health records at the Federal Medical Centre, Bida, Nigeria. METHOD: A retrospective study was carried out to assess the documentation of 780 paper-based health records of inpatients discharged in 2009. RESULTS: 732 patient records were reviewed from the departments of obstetrics (45.90%), pediatrics (24.32%), and other specialties (29.78%). Documentation performance was very good (98.49%) for promptness recording care within the first 24 h of admission, fair (58.80%) for proper entry of patient unit number (unique identifier), and very poor (12.84%) for utilization of discharge summary forms. Overall, surgery records were nearly always (100%) prompt regarding care documentation, obstetrics records were consistent (80.65%) in entering patients' names in notes, and the principal diagnosis was properly documented in all (100%) completed discharge summary forms in medicine. 454 (62.02%) folders were chronologically arranged, 456 (62.29%) were properly held together with file tags, and most (80.60%) discharged folders reviewed, analyzed and appropriate code numbers were assigned. CONCLUSIONS: Inadequacies were found in clinical documentation, especially gross underutilization of discharge summary forms. However, some forms were properly documented, suggesting that hospital healthcare providers possess the necessary skills for quality clinical documentation but lack the will. There is a need to institute a clinical documentation improvement program and promote quality clinical documentation among staff.


Subject(s)
Documentation/standards , Management Audit , Medical Records , Humans , Medicine , Nigeria , Patient Discharge , Quality Control , Reproducibility of Results , Tertiary Care Centers
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