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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 24 - 24
1 May 2014
Wood T PARKER P Hinsley D
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The Whole Hospital Information System (WHIS) was introduced to Camp Bastion on 01 Feb 2012. It is a custom-built software solution for electronic patient records. A one-day training package is mandatory as part of current pre-deployment training

The aim of this study was to identify how well the data recorded on WHIS correlates with the information recorded within the paper-based theatre logbook.

A bespoke search was created by the Hospital J6 team, which identified the procedure, the surgeons involved, the date and time of the procedures and the demographic of the patient. The search was completed to include all operations performed from 01 Feb 2012 to 31 Mar 2013. This corresponds to the first 14 months of WHIS usage.

The results at first looked promising, showing that 2672 surgical episodes had been performed, with an average 1.68 (0–11) procedures per episode, and 2.1 (0–9) surgeons per case. The mean operative duration was 98 minutes. However on closer scrutiny, the records showed that 447 cases (16.7%) had no procedure and 138 (5.2%) cases had no surgeon. 29 (1.1%) cases had no procedure and no surgeon recorded.

The data recorded on WHIS during the study period is not currently complete enough to discontinue usage of paper records.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XV | Pages 15 - 15
1 Apr 2012
Taylor D Vater G Parker P
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Haemorrhage is the main cause of preventable death on the modern battlefield. As IEDs in Afghanistan become increasingly powerful, more proximal limb injuries occur. Significant concerns now exist about the ability of the CAT tourniquet to control distal haemorrhage following mid thigh application.

Aim

To evaluate the efficacy of the CAT windlass tourniquet in comparison to the newer EMT pneumatic tourniquet.

Method

Serving soldiers were recruited from a military orthopaedic outpatient clinic. Participants' demographics and blood pressure were recorded and a short medical history obtained to exclude any arteriopathic conditions. Doppler ultrasound was used to identify the popliteal pulses bilaterally. The CAT was randomly self-applied by the participant at mid thigh level and the presence or absence of the popliteal pulse on Doppler was recorded. The process was repeated on the contralateral leg with the CAT now applied by a trained researcher. Finally the EMT tourniquet was self applied to the first leg and popliteal pulse change Doppler recorded again.