Trauma patient management concerns more than 140,000 patients per year in France. PACA Regional Emergency Observatory (ORU) has issued recommendations to optimize the management of these trauma patients from pre-hospital phase to hospitalization first hours. Ideally, pre-hospital care should not exceed 60 minutes, from accident (first call to the SAMU) to trauma center arrival: the "golden hour" concept. Patients presenting at least one of the Vittel criteria are considered as severely traumatized and are classified according to 3 states of seriousness: unstable, critical and potentially serious. They are referred to trauma centers whose classification is based on their technical facilities, ranging from level 1 (maximum technical facilities) to level 3 (minimum technical facilities). Patients are referred according to their severity, distance from accident site, referral center and availability of each site. Initial hospital management recommends a whole body CT scan within 45 minutes for patients categorized as unstable or critical by pre-hospital doctor and 90 minutes for patients deemed potentially serious. FILTRAUMA PACA study will analyze the impact of the different management sequences of severe trauma patients based on reliable temporal data because it is automatically incremented in databases and will seek to find a correlation with patient outcome (survival at 24 hours and 28 days). The main hypothesis tested is that PACA ORU recommended delay respect during trauma patient initial management is correlated with vital prognosis in short (24 hours) and medium terms (28 days).
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To evaluate whether compliance with the "golden hour", pre-hospital delay recommended by PACA ORU, influences severe trauma patient vital status.
Timeframe: 24 hours