Application effect of descending ladder thinking in post-hospital emergency nursing of craniocerebral injury patients combined with cervical spine injury
LI Chunjuan GU Jie CHEN Tingting#br#
Department of Emergency, Yancheng First People’s Hospital, Jiangsu Province, Yancheng 224001, China
Abstract:Objective To explore the application effect of descending ladder thinking in post-hospital emergency nursing of craniocerebral injury patients combined with cervical spine injury. Methods From April 2019 to April 2021, 80 patients with craniocerebral injury combined with cervical spine injury in Yancheng First People’s Hospital of Jiangsu Province were selected as the research objects, according to the random number table method, they were divided into control group and observation group, with 40 cases in each group. The control group received routine nursing, while the observation group received descending ladder thinking intervention nursing. The time of emergency treatment after hospital, warning time, time of venous access establishment, incidence of complications, and Glasgow coma index score were compared between the two groups. Results After intervention, the early warning time, emergency treatment time, venous channel establishment time, and triage evaluation time in the observation group were shorter than those in the control group, and the differences were statistically significant (P < 0.05); the total incidence of complications in observation group was lower than that in control group, and the difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05). The communication, vision, speech, hearing, motor, and arousal scores of the two groups were higher than those before intervention, and the observation group were higher than those in the control group, and the differences were statistically significant (P < 0.05). Conclusion For patients with craniocerebral injury and cervical spine injury, emergency nursing with ladder descending thinking after hospital can improve the application time of each emergency treatment, improve complications, reduce Glasgow coma index, and improve prognosis, which is worthy of clinical promotion and adoption.