Law enforcement in the trauma bay: a survey of members of the American Academy for the Surgery of Trauma

EJ Kaufman, U Khatri, EC Hall, R Alur… - Trauma Surgery & …, 2023 - tsaco.bmj.com
Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, 2023tsaco.bmj.com
Background Trauma patients frequently come into contact with law enforcement officers
(LEOs) during the course of their medical care, but little is known about how LEO presence
affects processes of care. We surveyed members of the American Association for the
Surgery of Trauma (AAST) to assess their perspectives on frequency, circumstances, and
implications of LEO presence in trauma bays nationwide. Methods Survey items addressed
respondents' experience with the frequency and context of LEO presence and their …
Background
Trauma patients frequently come into contact with law enforcement officers (LEOs) during the course of their medical care, but little is known about how LEO presence affects processes of care. We surveyed members of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) to assess their perspectives on frequency, circumstances, and implications of LEO presence in trauma bays nationwide.
Methods
Survey items addressed respondents’ experience with the frequency and context of LEO presence and their perspectives on the impact of LEO presence for patients, clinical care, and public safety. Respondent demographics, professional characteristics, and practice setting were collected. The survey was distributed electronically to AAST members in September and October of 2020. Responses were compared by participant age, gender, race, ethnicity, urban versus rural location using χ2 tests.
Results
Of 234 respondents, 189 (80.7%) were attending surgeons, 169 (72.2%) identified as white, and 144 (61.5%) as male. 187 respondents (79.9%) observed LEO presence at least weekly. Respondents found LEO presence was most helpful for public safety, followed by clinical care, and then for patients. Older respondents rated LEO presence as helpful more often than younger respondents regarding the impact on patients, clinical care, and public safety (p<0.001 across all domains). When determining LEO access, respondents assessed severity of the patient’s condition, the safety of emergency department staff, the safety of LEOs, and a patient’s potential role as a threat to public safety.
Conclusions
Respondents described a wide range of perspectives on the impact and consequence of LEO in the trauma bay, with little policy to guide interactions. The overlap of law enforcement and healthcare in the trauma bay deserves attention from institutional and professional policymakers to preserve patient safety and autonomy and patient-centered care.
Level of evidence
IV, survey study.
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