Journal of Research in Medical Sciences (Feb 2008)

Triage of war-injured troops in the Iran-Iraq War

  • Masoud Saghafi-Nia,
  • Seyed Masoud Khatami,
  • Nahid Nafissi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 8 – 11

Abstract

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<ul> <li><strong>BACKGROUND</strong>: This study compared the triage of Iran-Iraq war-injured troops within the first two years of the war with that after the first two years.</li> <li><strong>METHODS</strong>: This was a retrospective study, which compared the triage of the admissions for abdominal injuries during the first two years of the Iran-Iraq War with that in the next 6 years. Out of nearly 50,000 cases, 1,176 ones were randomly selected and their triage information was recorded and analyzed.&nbsp;</li> <li><strong>RESULTS</strong>: About 12.5% of patients were operated on within less than 8 hours during the first two years. From 1982 towards the end of the conflict (1988), the patients were treated within progressively shorter periods of sustaining injury; 68.8% were operated on within less than 4 hours of injury. The mean delay between injury and treatment in the first two years of war was 12 hours while it was 5 hours between 1982 and 1988. The difference was significant (P&lt;0.05) but the mortality rate was not significantly different.</li> <li><strong>CONCLUSIONS</strong>: Patient triage was conducted differently at various stages of conflict. Better patient triage after 1982, may have been due to improved care and more specialized triage of injured troops.</li> <li><strong>Key words</strong>: Iran-Iraq war, abdominal injuries, triage.<br /> </li> </ul>

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