Upper Extremity Trauma in Costa Rica - Evaluating Epidemiology and Identifying Opportunities.

Luis Miguel Castro Appiani, Samuel Castro, Brenda Romero, Juan Diego D��az Salas, Paula Vindas, Rolando Soto, Cristhian Castro Artavia, Robin Kamal, Lauren M Shapiro
Author Information
  1. Luis Miguel Castro Appiani: Orthopaedic Surgeon and Traumatologist, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital Cl��nica B��blica, Aveinda 14, Calle 1 Y Central, San Jos��, Costa Rica.
  2. Samuel Castro: Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, CA 94305.
  3. Brenda Romero: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital Metropolitano, Lindora, San Jose, Costa Rica.
  4. Juan Diego D��az Salas: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital La Cat��lica, Goicoechea, San Jos��, Costa Rica.
  5. Paula Vindas: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital del Trauma, La Uruca, San Jose, Costa Rica.
  6. Rolando Soto: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital del Trauma, La Uruca, San Jose, Costa Rica.
  7. Cristhian Castro Artavia: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Centro National de Rehabilitatci��n, Alborada, San Jos��, Costa Rica.
  8. Robin Kamal: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, 450 Broadway St, Redwood City, CA 94063.
  9. Lauren M Shapiro: Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California - San Francisco, 1500 Owens Street, San Francisco, CA 94158.

Abstract

Background: Traffic accidents and musculoskeletal injuries represent a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Costa Rica. To inform capacity building efforts, we conducted a survey study of hand and upper extremity (UE) fellowship-trained surgeons in Costa Rica to evaluate the epidemiology, complications, and challenges in care of UE trauma.
Methods: Aiming to capture all hand and UE trained surgeons in Costa Rica, we compiled a list of nine surgeons and sent a survey in Spanish using Qualtrics. Assessment questions were developed to understand the burden, complications, practice patterns, challenges, and capacity associated with care of UE trauma. Questions were designed to focus on opportunities for future investigation. Questions were translated and adapted by two bilingual speakers. Data were reported descriptively and open-ended responses were analyzed using content analysis.
Results: Nine (100%) surgeons completed the survey. Distal radius fractures, hand and finger fractures, and tendon injuries are the most frequently noted conditions. Stiffness and infection are the most common complications. About 29% of patients are unable to get necessary therapy and 13% do not return for follow-up care with monetary, distance, and transportation limitations being the greatest challenges.
Conclusions: The burden of UE trauma in Costa Rica is high. Identifying common conditions, complications, challenges, and capacity allows for a tailored approach to partnership and capacity building (e.g. directing capacity building and/or research infrastructure toward distal radius fractures). These insights represent opportunities to inform community-driven care improvement and research initiatives, such as Delphi consensus approaches to identify priorities or the development of outcome measurement systems.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. K23 AR073307/NIAMS NIH HHS

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0CostaRicacapacityUEhandsurgeonscomplicationschallengescaretraumabuildingsurveyfracturesinjuriesrepresentinformupperextremityepidemiologyusingburdenQuestionsopportunitiesradiusconditionscommonIdentifyingresearchBackground:Trafficaccidentsmusculoskeletalmajorcausemorbiditymortalityeffortsconductedstudyfellowship-trainedevaluateMethods:AimingcapturetrainedcompiledlistninesentSpanishQualtricsAssessmentquestionsdevelopedunderstandpracticepatternsassociateddesignedfocusfutureinvestigationtranslatedadaptedtwobilingualspeakersDatareporteddescriptivelyopen-endedresponsesanalyzedcontentanalysisResults:Nine100%completedDistalfingertendonfrequentlynotedStiffnessinfection29%patientsunablegetnecessarytherapy13%returnfollow-upmonetarydistancetransportationlimitationsgreatestConclusions:highallowstailoredapproachpartnershipegdirectingand/orinfrastructuretowarddistalinsightscommunity-drivenimprovementinitiativesDelphiconsensusapproachesidentifyprioritiesdevelopmentoutcomemeasurementsystemsUpperExtremityTrauma-EvaluatingEpidemiologyOpportunitiesmulti-centerorthopaedic

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