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Minnesota Statewide Trauma System

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Trauma is the leading cause of death for ages 1 to 44 ... Irrigation and debridement of open femur fracture. Discharged home on day 10 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minnesota Statewide Trauma System


1
Minnesota Statewide Trauma System

Tribes Transportation Conference Walker,
Minnesota October 17, 2006
2
Navigating the Trauma System
  • Emergency Trauma Care - The Forth E
  • Goals
  • Governance System
  • Hospital Designations
  • Data
  • Case Review
  • What Next?

3
The Forth TZD E
  • Engineering
  • Enforcement
  • Education
  • Emergency Trauma Care
  • (Statewide Trauma System)

4
Serious Trauma Only
  • Not bumps, bruises, or medical conditions
  • Small population of total trauma patients

5
Minnesota Trauma Facts
  • Trauma is the leading cause of death for ages 1
    to 44
  • Overall, trauma is the third leading cause of
    death
  • On average, more than 2,400 Minnesotans die from
    trauma each year

6
Motor Vehicle Crashes
  • 2005
  • _______________________
  • 559 fatalities
  • 70 of the fatal crashes were in rural areas
  • Economic cost of MVC fatalities was 631,670,000
  • Based on the National Safety
  • councils economic cost figures

7
Benefits
  • 9 decrease in MVC deaths
  • 15 to 20 increase survival of seriously injured
    patients
  • Increase in productive working years

8
Benefits
  • Decrease second trauma
  • Decrease transfers
  • Improve disaster preparedness

9
Minnesotas New Trauma System
  • Legislation to enact a statewide trauma system
    was passed July 2005
  • Commissioner of Health charged to implement this
    initiative
  • The state trauma program is located in the Office
    of Rural Health and Primary Care

10
Goals
  • Match patient to resources
  • Quick, confident decision-making
  • Shorten time to definitive care
  • Data-driven QA/QI system

11
Governance
12
System Design
  • Four designation levels
  • Indicates resources available (not quality of
    care)
  • Voluntary participation
  • ACS levels I, II
  • State process for levels III IV
  • Trauma registry
  • EMS triage transport guidelines

13
Level III Overview
  • 24/7 surgeon response capability (ED ICU)
  • Surgeon involvement in program, QA/QI
  • MD to ED w/in 15 minutes
  • ICU
  • Injury prevention activities

14
Level IV Overview
  • No surgery requirement
  • No ICU requirement
  • MD, NP or PA to ED w/in 30 minutes

15
General Criteria
  • Trauma Team activation protocol
  • Trauma program manager/ coordinator
  • Trauma program medical director/advisor

16
General Criteria
  • 24-hour ED
  • Lab
  • Blood bank
  • Standard analysis
  • Typing/cross matching
  • Transfer
  • Protocol
  • Agreements

17
General Criteria
  • Physicians
  • Board certified in GS or EM ATLS/CALS once
  • Not boarded in GS or EM Current ATLS/CALS
  • RNs Trauma education if caring for trauma
    patients
  • CALS, TNCC, etc.
  • In-house training that meets state objectives

18
General Criteria
  • Formal QA/QI policy
  • Minimum filters prescribed
  • Peer review w/ all physicians involved in trauma
    care
  • Multidisciplinary trauma review (level III)

19
General Criteria
  • Data submission via trauma registry
  • Web based
  • No cost
  • Small data set
  • TBI/SCI submission
  • Benchmark against aggregate data
  • NTR data submission

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Linked Databases
29
EMS Implications
30
Transportation Requirements
  • Major trauma patients
  • to highest designated trauma hospital w/in
  • 30 minutes
  • Bypass of undesignated hospitals
  • Compromised airways to nearest designated trauma
    hospital
  • No bypass of Level II for Level I
  • Local/regional resources may necessitate
    deviations

31
EMS Triage Transport Guideline
  • Develop by July 1, 2009
  • Consistent with Statewide Trauma System
    criteria
  • Influenced by local hospital resources
  • Approved by EMSRB
  • Identify Pts to be transferred upon arrival at
    scene
  • Aeromedical lt15 minutes away ? wait
  • Aeromedical gt15 minutes away ? transport, meet
    chopper at hospital

32
Illustrative Case Study



33
Level IV Case Study
  • 37 year old
  • Head-on collision
  • Unrestrained driver
  • Trauma team at level IV trauma hospital activated
    at 0651
  • Patient arrives at 0702

34
Level IV Trauma Hospital Course
  • Confused, GCS 14 unequal pupils
  • Hypertensive, tachycardic
  • Respiratory distress
  • Considerable chest pain
  • Obvious L femur fracture

35
Emergency Department
  • Transfer ordered immediately
  • Protocol in place
  • Transfer agreement previously established with a
    Level I facility
  • Rapid sequence intubation
  • Chest, pelvis, C-spine X-rays
  • Chest tube placed
  • Foley, NG tube placed
  • Antibiotics, analgesics administered

36
Diagnosis at time of transfer
  • Closed head injury
  • R pneumothorax
  • Bilateral pulmonary contusions
  • Multiple rib fractures
  • Multiple pelvic fractures
  • Open L femur fracture
  • Clavicle fracture
  • Transferred via
  • helicopter at 0835

37
Level I Trauma Hospital Course
  • Arrives at 0857
  • Primary and secondary exams repeated
  • CT scan
  • Head, chest, abdomen negative
  • Neurosurgery evaluation
  • Irrigation and debridement of open femur fracture
  • Discharged home on day 10

38
Level III Case Study
  • 16 year old
  • ATV roll-over
  • Pinned beneath ATV briefly
  • Rural EMS response
  • Trauma team at level III trauma hospital
    activated at 1748
  • Pt arrives at 1815
  • Surgeon arrives at 1822

39
Level III Trauma Hospital Course
  • Awake and alert
  • Critically hypotensive, tachycardic
  • Abdominal pain
  • Neck pain
  • Obvious femur fracture

40
Emergency Department
  • Primary and secondary exams
  • C-spine, chest, pelvic X-rays negative
  • FAST exam/ultrasound showed free fluid in the
    abdomen
  • Blood transfusion begun
  • Typed and cross matched blood ordered
  • Critically low blood pressure persisted
  • RSI
  • Transfer ordered
  • To the OR

41
Operating Room Course
  • Spleen removed/bleeding controlled
  • Abdomen packed and left open
  • Transferred via
  • helicopter at 2020

42
Level II Trauma Hospital Course
  • Arrives at 2050
  • CT of head, neck, chest negative
  • Abdomen re-explored then closed
  • Typed and crossed blood running
  • Surgical fixation of leg fracture on day 2
  • Discharged home at day 7.

43
Where do we go from here?
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50
Grants
  • Consider/prepare for application
  • Expenses incurred
  • Staff training
  • Equipment purchases
  • Other
  • 5000
  • Download from Web site

51
Current Status
  • MNTrauma up running
  • Applications being processed
  • RTAC development
  • Grants being awarded

52
www.health.state.mn.us/traumasystem
  • Tim Held
  • State Trauma System Coordinator
  • (651) 201-3868
  • tim.held_at_health.state.mn.us
  • Chris Ballard
  • Designation Coordinator
  • (651) 201-3841
  • chris.ballard_at_health.state.mn.us
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