Virtual Mentor American Medical Association Journal of Ethics July 2009, Volume 11, Number 7:

Similar documents
The Ohio State University Department of Orthopaedics. Residency Curriculum. PGY1 Rotations

Optimizing the clinical role of the ACP in Trauma Gena Brawley, ACNP Carolinas Healthcare Systems NPSS Asheville, NC

EMERGENCY MEDICINE CLINICAL ROTATION COMPETENCY BASED CURRICULUM

ADC ED/TRAUMA POLICY AND PROCEDURE Policy 221. I. Title Trauma team Activation Protocol/Roles & Responsibilities of the Trauma Team

Comparison: ITLS Provider and Trauma Nursing Core Course (TNCC)

Trauma. Level 2. This resident can lead a to recognize common. This resident can. accurately diagnose. team that cares for traumatic conditions and

The Royal College of Surgeons of England

1. Receives report from EMS and/or outlying facility. 5. Adheres to safety and universal precaution guidelines.

Department of Health and Wellness Emergency Care Standards April 2014

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine Rotation: Post Anesthesia Care Unit (CA-1, CA-2, CA-3)

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. Division of Trauma, Acute Care & Critical Care Surgery

Title: ED Management of Trauma Patient Protocol

Level 3 Trauma Hospital Criteria

Level 4 Trauma Hospital Criteria

Document Title: Trauma Patient Care in the Emergency Department : Pitfalls to Avoid

Trauma Assessment: Primary Secondary Tertiary It s as easy as ABC Updated with 2014 TNCC 7 th Edition Data. Pete Benolken Kelly Simon Trauma Services

Course: Acute Trauma Care Course Number SUR 1905 (1615)

Alabama Trauma Center Designation Criteria

Iowa Methodist Medical Center Department of Surgery Education Resident Rotation Description

Subject: Trauma Team Roles and Responsibilities for TRAUMA ACTIVATION patients

1/7/2014. Dispatch for fire at Rosslyn, VA metro station Initial dispatch as Box Alarm

The 2013 Boston Marathon Bombings

Emergency Department Student Elective Goals and Objectives

HOSPITALS TO ENTER PATIENTS INTO THE

Surgical Care at the District Hospital. EMERGENCY & ESSENTIAL SURGICAL CARE

Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR): A Decision Aid For. Patients And Their Families

2011 Guidelines for Field Triage of Injured Patients

For Vanderbilt Medical Center Carolyn Buppert, NP, JD Law Office of Carolyn Buppert

AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS 1999 TRAUMA FACILITIES CRITERIA (minus the Level IV criteria)

Modesto Junior College Course Outline of Record EMS 390

Endotracheal Intubation Adult (April 2013)

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) vs Non-EMS Transport of Critically Injured Patients. worthiness of specific interventions

Interactive Trauma: Beyond the Moment of Impact

Trauma Rotation UMASS Memorial University Campus

Modesto Junior College Course Outline of Record EMS 350

Wadsworth-Rittman Hospital EMS Protocol

CA-3 TRAUMA/BURN ROTATION Regions Hospital Rotation Site Director: Dr. Matthew Layman Rotation Duration: 4 weeks

Department of Emergency Medical Services

Chapter 1. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives 9/11/2012. Introduction to EMS Systems

Emergency Medical Technician

STAG TRAUMA. Quality Indicators

To teach residents the fundamentals of patient triage and prioritization of medical care.

H5VK 04 (SFH CHS35) Provide First Aid to an Individual Needing Emergency Assistance

EMS Subspecialty Certification Review Course. Learning Objectives. Scope of Practice

Tactical Combat Casualty Care. CAPT Peter Rhee, MC, USN MD, MPH, DMCC, FACS, FCCM Professor of Surgery / Molecular Cellular Biology

RURAL TRAUMA. Bianchi JD, Collin GR. Management of splenic trauma at a rural, level I trauma center. The American Surgeon 1997;63(6):

Emergency Medical Services Program

First Aid as a Life Skill. Training Requirements for Quality Provision of Unit Standard-based First Aid Training

Course Title: Emergency Medical Responder 3 Course Number: Course Credit: 1. Course Description:

Fundamental Critical Care Support (FCCS)

Description of Essential Criteria for PREPARED Emergency Department

POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

Course ID March 2016 COURSE OUTLINE. EMT 140 Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)

The curriculum is based on achievement of the clinical competencies outlined below:

COMBAT Research Study

Objectives. Emergency Medicine Risk Factors

PARAMEDIC REFRESHER COURSE

ENVIRONMENT Preoperative evaluation clinic, Preoperative holding area. Preoperative evaluation clinic, Postoperative care unit, Operating room

Supervision of Residents/Chain of Command

TRIAGE SYSTEMS FOR TRAUMA CARE

EMERGENCY CARE SYSTEMS

ONLINE INFORMATION SESSION

PGY-1 Overall Goals & Objectives

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS FIELD MEDICAL TRAINING BATTALION-EAST Camp Lejeune, NC CONDUCT TRIAGE

If you have questions or concerns about the information provided in this pamphlet, please feel free to discuss it with a KGH staff member, such as

Pediatric Chain of Survival. Pediatric Chain of Survival. Emergency Care Professionals 9/11/2012

EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE Pediatric Advanced Life Support

Comer Emergency Department (ED) Clinical Guidelines: Pediatric Trauma Service Manual

NAME: DATE: MARGARETVILLE HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN ASSITANT/NURSE PRACTITIONER ED CLINICAL PRIVILEGES

PATIENT - CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION POLICY

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS FIELD MEDICAL TRAINING BATTALION Camp Lejeune, NC

Course: Sub Internship Emergency Medicine Course Number: EMED 1902

Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Rotation PL-2 Residents

Policy on Resident Supervision. University of South Florida College of Medicine General Surgery Residency Rev. July 2013

Military Trauma Training Performed in a Civilian Trauma Center

Chapter 01: Professional Nursing Practice Lewis: Medical-Surgical Nursing, 10th Edition

BACKGROUND. Emergency Departments in Smaller Centres and Rural Communities

Assessment and Reassessment of Patients

53. MASTER OF SCIENCE PROGRAM IN GENERAL MEDICINE, UNDIVIDED TRAINING PROGRAM. 1. Name of the Master of Science program: general medicine

Deposited on: 06 May 2010

JOINT COMMITTEE TO CREATE A NATIONAL POLICY TO ENHANCE SURVIVABILITY FROM MASS CASUALTY SHOOTING EVENTS HARTFORD CONSENSUS II

INSTRUCTIONS All new applicants must meet the following requirements as approved by the UNM SRMC Board of Directors effective: June 2017:

Title Protocol for the Management of Chest Wall Injuries (over 12 years of age) in MIU s and WIC s.

ROTOPRONE THERAPY SYSTEM. with people in mind.

Appendix 1 - Licensing and Audit Requirements for Emergency Department Services

COURSE DESCRIPTIONS. Emergency Health Sciences (EMSP)

Sankei Shinbun Syuppan Co.,Ltd. READI-J-V. Readiness Estimate And Deployability Index Japanese-Version

Carolinas MED-1 Mobile Emergency Department. Dr. David Callaway Medical Director, Carolinas MED-1 Director, Operational & Disaster Medicine

ROTATION: TRAUMA AND CRITICAL CARE (L AND A SURGERY)

the victorian paediatric emergency transport service pets

High Threat Mass Casualty 1/7/2014. Game changer..

Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Division of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care. Clinical Management Guideline: Standard Trauma Resuscitation

The University of Arizona Pediatric Residency Program. Primary Goals for Rotation. Anesthesia

Regions Hospital Delineation of Privileges Nurse Practitioner

Prone Ventilation of the Critically Ill Patient

Developing a Trauma Center

CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITALS

Specialized Nursing Postgraduate Diploma, Faculty of Nursing, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland

Learning Objectives. Registration and Continental Breakfast 7:00 AM -7:30 AM

Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) Elective PL-1 Residents

Transcription:

Virtual Mentor American Medical Association Journal of Ethics July 2009, Volume 11, Number 7: 516-520. CLINICAL PEARL The Team Approach to Management of the Polytrauma Patient Stephen C. Morris, MD Few events in modern medicine are as intense and rewarding as management of polytrauma victims. Unlike many chronic diseases that occur later in a person s life, trauma has a disproportionate impact on society s young and middle-aged people. Victims of severe trauma are often previously healthy people who, sometimes through no fault of their own, become suddenly and gravely ill. With intensive, coordinated care, patients can often be brought back from the brink of death. Their road to survival, however, is not easy and not one most members of society, or even some health care workers, understand. This road is fraught with many difficulties and complications; it involves teams of health care professionals working together with one common goal. Emergency medicine physicians are often integral to this system, and, as neither the first nor the last to provide care, we are in a good place to understand how the system works, what is necessary for a good outcome, and some pitfalls that can be avoided. This article reviews some of the epidemiology of severely injured trauma patients, early management issues in the field and emergency department, and the system of care required for the patient to thrive after initial survival has been assured. Understanding a patient s injuries, management, and prognosis first means understanding the mechanism of his or her injury, with certain mechanisms being associated with greater chance of severe injury and poor outcome [1]. The most critical branch point of many trauma algorithms is between penetrating and blunt trauma, with burns and environmental injuries considered separately. Motor-vehicle crashes are the primary cause of blunt injury, followed by falls and direct trauma. Penetrating trauma often from gun shots, stab wounds, and industrial accidents is more rare but poses a higher rate of fatality [2]. Prehosptial Care Despite excellent epidemiological data, including information from the National Trauma Data Bank, significant debate surrounds the benefit of many prehospital interventions, transportation methods, and training of first responders involved in the care of trauma patients [3, 4]. Current thinking prioritizes methods that decrease prehospital time by addressing only life-threatening injuries in the field through control of bleeding, cervical-spine stabilization, and similar interventions [5, 6]. Performing invasive procedures in the hospital setting and having initial hospital care provided at a trauma center have been associated with better outcomes [7-10]. Understanding that effective triage gives priority to those most likely to benefit from 516 Virtual Mentor, July 2009 Vol 11

rapid intervention has led to creation of many prehospital and trauma scoring methods including the Glasgow Coma Score, Pediatric Trauma Score, Revised Trauma Score, and Injury Severity Score but no consensus exists on best practices [11-14]. Emergency Department Care Stabilization. Following the patient from the field to the hospital means moving from initial to more-definitive treatment of injuries. This may be a very short stop in the emergency department if surgery or interventional radiology is indicated, or it could mean hours of labor-intensive multispecialty resuscitation. When discussing stabilization of the trauma patient, clinicians refer to the first golden hour for the initial resuscitative techniques [15, 16]. Staffing for severely injured trauma patients is a team effort with allocated tasks conducted simultaneously [17]. The team is led by a trauma surgeon or emergency medicine-trained physician and involves concurrent evaluation and interventions. Physicians, nursing, and technical staff work to address immediate life-threatening injuries; identify secondary lifethreatening injuries; establish intravenous access; and treat the patient with oxygen, crystalloid fluid, and often medications and blood products [18]. Treatment algorithms are highly regimented and follow Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) protocols. ATLS is a periodically updated, evidence- and consensus-based training course taught by the American College of Surgeons to physicians who care for trauma patients [19]. The exam and associated interventions are divided into primary and secondary surveys, with the primary survey following the mnemonic ABCDE, which stands for airway, breathing, circulation, disability, and exposure. A. Open the airway; address any obstruction by suction of secretions, foreign body removal, protective oral or nasal airway placement, and oral, nasal, or surgical airway management [20]. B. Stabilize breathing through provision of oxygen, managing lifethreatening chest trauma such as a pneumothorax or hemothorax with a chest tube, and management of mechanical ventilation. C. Establish circulation through intravenous, intraosseous, or centralvenous access; administer crystalloid fluid and blood products, as well as any medications that may support the patient s circulation. D. Assess disability from neurological injury such as paralysis and altered mental status. E. Expose the patient by removing his or her clothes and evaluating for immediate life-threatening injuries such as femur fractures, penetrating wounds, and arterial bleeding. Should a life-threatening injury or problem be identified at any level of ABCDE, it is addressed before moving on. Parts or all of the primary ABCDE evaluation may be repeated frequently during the management of the trauma patient. Virtual Mentor, July 2009 Vol 11 517

The secondary survey is a thorough head-to-toe examination that identifies and documents evidence of traumatic injury. Adjunctive survey measures are conducted, such as ultrasonography for a Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma (FAST) exam, and chest and pelvic x-rays [21]. Many additional procedures (surgical interventions, laceration repairs, splinting, etc.), evaluations (expert evaluations, laboratory studies, CT scans, etc.), and interventions (medications, vent management, etc.) can be conducted after this initial evaluation and management. Within 24 hours, a tertiary survey a repeat of the primary and secondary surveys is performed by the trauma service to identify injuries missed during the sometimeschaotic initial surveys and management [22]. During these initial evaluations in the emergency department, the team delivering care to a severely injured patient often expands significantly, with members being added based on the specific injuries and the prior medical conditions, age, or social situation of the patient or event. For example, orthopedic, neurologic, eye, dental, genital, urinary, cardiac, or vascular injuries may all require immediate evaluation by a specialist. Pregnant and pediatric victims of severe trauma need special care, as do those with significant underlying medical problems such as diabetes or cancer. Social services and pastoral care are often beneficial, given the tremendous stresses such an event causes to a victim of severe trauma and his or her family. Management. Stabilization of a polytrauma patient may initially be achieved in the emergency department or operating room, but the course of recovery is far from over. Continued sophisticated management of the patient in a skilled nursing setting (such as a surgical intensive care unit) is critical to good outcomes. It is particularly important where definitive management of injuries is delayed in favor of immediate stabilization known as damage-control surgery. This delay can improve the patient s physiologic state at the time of definitive treatment, but it requires intensive and deliberate strategies [23]. Secondary illness may complicate the patient s recovery, possibly with aspiration pneumonia, infection, stress ulcers, exacerbation of chronic disease, thromboembolism, or contrast-induced nephropathy. Should the patient recover enough to leave the intensive care unit and hospital, longterm recovery is again a team effort. Physical, speech, and occupational therapists are key players in maximizing patients return to normal life. Input from occupational medicine and psychiatry helps patients manage consequences of trauma and significant life change. The special services available in rehab hospitals can be particularly beneficial in supplying the needs of patients with complicated injuries. While the road to recovery for polytrauma victims may be one of fits and starts with many complications along the way, it offers clinicians the chance to reverse a tragedy. By working together, teams of care professionals can have the satisfaction of helping critically ill patients return to their lives. References 518 Virtual Mentor, July 2009 Vol 11

1. American College of Surgeons. Resources for Optimal Care of the Injured Patient: 2006. Chicago, IL: American College of Surgeons; 2006. 2. Sauaia A, Moore FA, Moore EE, et al. Epidemiology of trauma deaths: a reassessment. J Trauma. 1995;38(2):185-193. 3. Liberman M, Mulder D, Lavoie A, Denis R, Sampalis JS. Multicenter Canadian study of prehospital trauma care. Ann Surg. 2003;237(2):153-160. 4. Liberman M, Mulder D, Sampalis J. Advanced or basic life support for trauma: meta-analysis and critical review of the literature. J Trauma. 2000;49(4):584-599. 5. Feero S, Hedges JR, Simmons E, Irwin L. Does out-of-hospital EMS time affect trauma survival? Am J Emerg Med. 1995;13(2):133-135. 6. Jacobs LM, Sinclair A, Beiser A, D Agostino RB. Prehospital advanced life support: benefits in trauma. J Trauma. 1984;24(1):8-13. 7. Shafi S, Gentilello L. Pre-hospital endotracheal intubation and positive pressure ventilation is associated with hypotension and decreased survival in hypovolemic trauma patients: an analysis of the National Trauma Data Bank. J Trauma. 2005;59(5):1140-1145. 8. Champion HR, Sacco WJ, Copes WS. Improvement in outcome from trauma center care. Arch Surg. 1992;127(3):333-338. 9. Nathens AB, Jurkovich GJ, Maier RV, et al. Relationship between trauma center volume and outcomes. JAMA. 2001;285(9):1164-1171. 10. Cornwell EE 3rd, Chang DC, Phillips J, Campbell KA. Enhanced trauma program commitment at a level I trauma center: effect on the process and outcome of care. Arch Surg. 2003;138(8):838-843. 11. Brenneman FD, Boulanger BR, McLellan BA, Redelmeier DA. Measuring injury severity: time for a change? J Trauma. 1998;44(4):580-582. 12. Osler T, Baker SP, Long W. A modification of the injury severity score that both improves accuracy and simplifies scoring. J Trauma. 1997;43(6):922-925. 13. Esposito TJ, Offner PJ, Jurkovich GJ, Griffith J, Maier RV. Do prehospital trauma center triage criteria identify major trauma victims? Arch Surg. 1995;130(2):171-176. 14. Tepas JJ 3rd, Ramenofsky ML, Mollitt DL, Gans BM, DiScala C. The pediatric trauma score as a predictor of injury severity: an objective assessment. J Trauma. 1988;28(4):425-429. 15. Lerner EB, Moscati RM. The golden hour: scientific fact or medical urban legend? Acad Emerg Med. 2001;8(7):758-760. 16. Osterwalder JJ. Can the golden hour of shock safely be extended in blunt polytrauma patients? Prospective cohort study at a level I hospital in eastern Switzerland. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2002;17(2):75-80. 17. Driscoll PA, Vincent CA. Organizing an efficient trauma team. Injury. 1992;23(2):107-110. Virtual Mentor, July 2009 Vol 11 519

18. Grunfeld A, MacPhail I, Van Heast R, Khan I. 250: impact of the implementation of emergency physician trauma team leader coverage on patients with severe trauma. Ann Emerg Med. 2008;51(4):547. 19. Advanced Trauma Life Support. The ATLS program. 2008. http://www.facs.org/trauma/atls/about.html. Accessed June 4, 2009. 20. McGill J. Airway management in trauma: an update. Emerg Med Clin North Am. 2007;25(3):603-622. 21. Spahn DR, Cerny V, Coats TJ, et al. Management of bleeding following major trauma: a European guideline. Crit Care. 2007;11(1):R17. 22. Biffl WL, Harrington DT, Cioffi WG. Implementation of a tertiary trauma survey decreases missed injuries. J Trauma. 2003;54(1):38-43. 23. Parr MJ, Alabdi T. Damage control surgery and intensive care. Injury. 2004;35(7):713-722. Stephen C. Morris, MD, is a clinical instructor in emergency medicine at Brigham and Women s Hospital in Boston. He graduated from the University of Washington School of Medicine and completed his residency in emergency medicine at Yale- New Haven Hospital and a fellowship in emergency medicine at Harvard. He is pursuing a master s degree in public health at the Harvard School of Public Health. The viewpoints expressed on this site are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AMA. Copyright 2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. 520 Virtual Mentor, July 2009 Vol 11