Director of Global Health Education, Assistant Residency Program Director
Fellow International Emergency Medicine
I am a physician researcher. I serve as Director of the International Emergency and Public Health Fellowship at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and the Bloomberg School of Public Health. My work is focused on measuring and developing interventions to improve health outcomes for refugee and displaced persons in conflict and post-conflict settings. I have 7 years of research experience in conducting community based interventions in diverse populations across multiple settings globally. I am currently PI on four funded research studies (World Bank, Department of State, Bureau of Population, Refugee and Migration (BPRM) and foundations). Through these research studies and others, I have successfully collaborated with investigators across multiple disciplines and institutions, mentored graduate and post-graduate students in diverse disciplines as well as partnered with community experts and organizations to conduct studies to improve health for individuals, families and communities.
*Associate Director, Office of Critical Event Preparedness and Response (CEPAR) *Assistant Professor, School of Medicine- Department of Emergency Medicine Bloomberg School of Public Health- Department of International Health
Traumatic injuries are the leading cause of death among persons 10-19 years of age worldwide
Results from the five databases were combined and duplicates were excluded, yielding a total of 2,037 articles. Title screening was performed to identify articles that were unrelated to natural disasters or human populations. Each title was screened by three reviewers and was retained if any of the reviewers established that inclusion criteria were met. During review of article titles, consensus was met when two out of three agreed on the relevance of the titles to advance in the systematic review.
A total of 2,037 articles were retrieved, of which only 10 (0.49%) contained quantitative data on earthquake-related pediatric injuries and could be used in the final analysis.
Author
Title
Year Article Pub- lished
Site of Earth- quake
Year of Earth- quake
Age Group of Study Popu- lation
Number of Injured Pediatric Patients Studied
Additional Study Population Characteristics
Age of Pediatric Popu- lation
Gueri M
The Popayan earthquake: A preliminary report on its effect on health
1984
Columbia
1983
all
41
Analysis of admitted patients only
<15 yrs
Reyes Ortiz M
Brief description of the effects on health of the earthquake of 3rd March 1985 -- Chile
1986
Chile
1985
all
254
<15 yrs
Sanchez-Carillo CI
Morbidity Following Mexico City's 1985 Earthquakes
1989
Mexico
1985
all
128
<15 yrs
Iskit SH
Analysis of 33 Pediatric Trauma Victims in the 1999 Marmara, Turkey Earthquake
2001
Turkey
1999
pediatric
33
Analysis of pts transferred to referral hospital
14 days- 16 yrs
Sarisozen B
Extremity Injuries in Children resulting from the 1999 Marmara earthquake: an epidemiologic study
2003
Marmara
1999
all
51
Admitted patients only
<16 yrs
Sabzehchian M
Pediatric Trauma at Tertiary-Level Hospitals in the Aftermath of the Bam, Iran Earthquake
2006
Iran
2003
pediatric
119
Analysis of pts admitted to 3 referral hospitals
<16 yrs
Bai X
Retrospective analysis: the earthquake-injured patients in Barakott of Pakistan
2009
Pakistan
2005
all
151
9 mos- 16 yrs
Xiang B
Triage of pediatric injuries after the 2008 Wen-Chuan earthquake in China
2009
China
2008
pediatric
119
Admitted patients only
pre- school, school
Farfel A
Haiti earthquake 2010: a field hospital pediatric perspective
2011
Haiti
2010
pediatric
155
0-18 yrs
Zhao J
Sichaun Earthquake and Emergency relief care for children
2011
Sichuan
2008
pediatric
192
<18 yrs
Fractures were the most commonly identified type of injury (four of the seven articles) with reported percentages ranging from 18.1% to 55.2% (pooled percentage 30.6%).
Many of the articles that reported injury by location focused only on orthopedic injuries, with fracture of extremities accounting for 17.1% to 60.8% (pooled percentage 36.8%).
Author
Year Article Published
Number of Injured Pediatric Patients Studied
Injuries Classified by Type
#
% of Injured Patients
Injuries Classified by Location
#
% of Injured Patients
Gueri M
1984
41
multiple trauma
5
12.2%
head injury
25
61.0%
fracture
10
24.4%
lower limb
4
9.8%
spinal column
2
4.9%
upper limb
3
7.3%
other
1
2.4%
traumatism (not specified)
1
2.4%
intraabdominal/ thoracic
1
2.4%
Reyes Ortiz M
1986
254
fracture
46
18.1%
skull bones and face
1
0.4%
neck and trunk
5
2.0%
upper extremity
12
4.7%
lower extremity
28
11.0%
dislocation
0
0.0%
intracranial injury without fracture
27
10.6%
sprains and tears
7
2.8%
internal injury to chest/abdomen/pelvis
2
0.8%
wound
104
40.9%
head, neck, trunk
55
21.7%
upper extremity
14
5.5%
lower extremity
35
13.8%
superficial injury
0
0.0%
contusion without alteration of skin
46
18.1%
bruises
4
1.6%
injury to nerves and spinal column
0
0.0%
complication of unspecified injury
2
0.8%
other
14
5.5%
Sanchez-Carillo CI
1989
128
multiple traumas
21
16.4%
simple fractures
19
14.8%
compound fractures
2
1.6%
simple contusions
37
28.9%
crushing
0
0.0%
wounds with contusions
18
14.1%
other
13
10.2%
Iskit SH
2001
33
crush injuries
15
CNS
8
24.2%
soft tissue
19
vertebral column
2
6.1%
peripheral nerve palsy
3
thoracic compression
1
3.0%
retroperitoneal hematoma
2
6.1%
fracture
8
24.2%
extremity
6
18.2%
pelvis
2
6.1%
Sarisozen B
2003
51
extremity and spine
31
60.8%
chest
1
2.0%
abdomen
3
5.9%
head
3
5.9%
other
5
9.8%
unknown
8
15.7%
Sabzehchian M
2006
119
joint injury
60
50.4%
upper/lower limb
10/50
8.4%/42.0%
laceration
61
51.3%
upper/lower limb
5/56
4.2%/47.1%
fracture
63
52.9%
upper/lower limb
11/52
9.2%/43.7%
ecchymosis
40
33.6%
upper/lower limb
9/31
7.6%/26.1%
hematoma
21
17.6%
upper/lower limb
2/19
1.7%/16.0%
deep wound
23
19.3%
upper/lower limb
1/22
1.7%/18.5%
vascular
13
10.9%
upper/lower limb
0/13
0.0%/10.9%
chest and abdomen
17
14.3%
head and spinal cord
37
31.1%
Bai X
2009
151
open soft tissue injury
106
70.2%
upper extremity wound
27
17.9%
open fracture
6
4.0%
lower extremity wound
37
24.5%
closed fracture
20
13.2%
head wound
34
22.5%
pain only
19
12.6%
trunk wound
2
1.3%
multple sites wound
12
7.9%
Xiang B
2009
119
fractures
104
upper limb
26
lower limb
60
pelvis
12
skull
2
thoracic spine
4
nerve injury
7
limb compartment syndrome
17
dislocation
2
liver fracture
5
soft tissue injury
4
hemopneumo- thorax
4
Farfel A
2011
155
fractures
48
31.0%
head injuries
5
3.2%
open wounds
52
33.5%
crush injuries
29
18.7%
superficial injuries
29
18.7%
contusion
8
5.2%
dislocations
5
3.2%
other
6
3.9%
Zhao J
2011
192
simple, open
127
66.1%
head
23
12.0%
simple, closed
41
21.4%
face and neck
6
3.1%
combined open and closed
35
18.2%
chest
18
9.4%
crush injury
12
6.3%
abdomen
6
3.1%
fracture
106
55.2%
pelvis
13
6.8%
soft tissue
73
38.0%
spine
17
8.9%
limb
106
55.2%
body surface
67
34.9%
The pediatric patient is likely to present with a unique array of injury patterns, secondary to differences in physiology and anatomy. By better understanding the specific injuries this population may face, healthcare providers may more adequately prepare for the needs of this vulnerable population in post-disaster settings. Therefore, trauma registries in any population, especially vulnerable subpopulations such pediatrics, are important to capture data for research, measure trauma system outcomes, and support quality improvement through assessment of the appropriateness and effectiveness of the trauma system.
Overall our systematic review of injury patterns in the pediatric population demonstrated a high incidence of fracture-related injuries (30.6%) and wounds. Our findings that extremities were the most common site of injury (36.8%) was also reported by Bartels, et al.
Our review also revealed that crush injuries are consistently reported (in 4 out of 10 articles). Crush injury and crush syndrome are common earthquake injury patterns. Crush injury is defined as compression of extremities and body parts that causes muscle swelling or neurologic disturbances in the affected parts of the body. Typically affected body parts include lower extremities (74%) and upper extremities (10%).
Our systematic review on earthquake-related pediatric injuries highlights major challenges regarding pediatric injury reporting in disaster settings. These challenges can be regarded as both limitations and urgent needs for consensus and future prospective research. The first challenge is related to the upper age limit of a "pediatric" patient in reporting injuries, as the definition of what constitutes a “child” varied significantly among these studies between 14 and 18 years of age. Consequently, that finding posed a major difficulty when compiling data, even for comparable injuries. The American College of Surgeons National Trauma Data Bank uses < age 20 years as their upper limit, however the facilities from which they receive data use anywhere from age 11 years to age 21 years, as the upper limit.
The second challenge relates to the substantial heterogeneity in classifying pediatric injuries. Our final 10 articles with related earthquake-related pediatric injuries had widely different methods for how data was collected, categorized and reported. As a result, the information was very difficult to interpret, which makes injury-specific disaster planning difficult. One way to potentially circumvent this challenge would be to adopt international classification standards such as International Classification of Disease (ICD)
The third challenge is the technical reporting of numerical results. In five of the ten studies, it was difficult to ascertain the denominator to calculate percentages of injuries, when only raw injury counts were provided.
The fourth challenge is the striking paucity of reporting pediatric-specific data in traumatic injuries. It is postulated that pediatric injuries are more likely to be underreported, due to the fact that children have a higher mortality rate, may have survived with fewer injuries or were incapable of reaching the hospital due to familial constraints.
The fifth challenge is the feasibility of comprehensive data registry systems in the aftermath of large scale disasters. In such chaotic situations, it can be very difficult to collect sufficient patient information.
Interesting areas of future research, beyond the scope of this paper, include considering the scale of hazard, e.g. the magnitude of earthquakes and seismic intensity in the sites, and vulnerability, e.g. basic infrastructure, health services, and building codes in the sites. These factors can influence the type and severity of the injuries. In addition, a comparison should be made between the characteristics of the earthquake-related injuries among the paediatric population and the earthquake-related injuries among the general population and with those of the paediatric population in usual settings.
Differences in age group definitions of pediatric patients, and in the injury classification system contribute to difficulty in quantifying the burden of earthquake-related injuries in the pediatric population. Uniform age limits and injury classification systems are paramount for drawing broader conclusions, enhancing disaster preparation for future earthquake disasters and decreasing morbidity and mortality. Some of these conclusions may be applicable to other types of disasters causing pediatric injuries. Further research in the area of pediatric trauma registries in disaster settings is require.
The authors would like to thanks Katie Lobner, Clinical Informationist at Welch Medical Library, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, for her assistance with the literature search.