Arkansas Department of Health Trauma Overview. Act 393 of 2009-Trauma System Act Trauma System: an organized and coordinated plan within a state that.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Public Health and Healthcare Issues. Public Health and Healthcare.
Advertisements

Marin County Emergency Medical Services Excellent Care – Every Patient, Every Time Marin County Multiple Patient Management Plan Training Module June 2013.
Incident Command System
Arkansas Telehealth: Shaping the Future of Healthcare Curtis L. Lowery, M.D. Professor and Chair Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology University of.
0 EMS Stakeholders Meeting 2011 August 25, 2011 Bob Leopold EMS and Trauma Systems Program.
Alabama Acute Health Care System Alabama Acute Health Care System System Information/Education.
COLORADO STATE EMS HOSPITAL DASHBOARD MERCY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER GINNA SANDERS, RN, BSN TRAUMA PROGRAM MANAGER.
Status of Washington State Emergency Cardiac and Stroke System Kathleen Jobe, MD FACEP Chair, Emergency Cardiac and Stroke Technical Advisory Committee.
South West Kansas Regional Trauma Council KDHE Advisory Committee on Trauma.
A Guide to EMS Point-of-Entry Developed by the Metropolitan Boston EMS Council Public Information and Education Resources (PIER) Committee.
An integrated system that facilitates the management of information in key areas Affords consistency across the state Expedites communication and processes.
EMS Dispatch and Education During a Pandemic Event Alicia Wiren LP, FP-C (+ all those other EMS related letters)
U n i t 5 Delivering post-crash care. © WHO, │ By the end of this unit, the trainee should be able to: describe the main actions that need to be.
Unit 3: Command & Control IC/IMT Interface
Templates for Organizing Stroke Triage. Getting Started Physicians Hospital administration Medical Society Hospital Council Stroke survivor groups Other.
Kansas Trauma System Advisory Committee on Trauma
Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS
Disaster Net Radio Greater Cincinnati Health Council.
Firefighter III Introduction Mod A Identify the Firefighter III’s role as a member of the organization. (4-2.1) The role of a firefighter III.
Capability Cliff Notes Series PHEP Capability 10—Medical Surge What Is It And How Will We Measure It?
Paramedic Care: Principles & Practice Volume 1: Introduction to Paramedicine CHAPTER Fourth Edition ©2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Paramedic Care: Principles.
The Importance of Emergency Medical Service Communication n communicate patient information n provide contact with medical control n control and coordinate.
Introduction to Emergency Medical Care
Research, Profession and Practice EMS SYSTEMS Components of an EMS System.
Paramedic Inter Facility Transfer Training ( Section 2 Medical Direction and QI )
Hospital Categorization: Role in Advancing Emergency Medicine Track D September 15, 2003 Barcelona Lewis R. Goldfrank, MD Professor and Chairman of Emergency.
Working Together to Save Lives Lynne Sears, RN, MS, PNP University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics South Central Regional Trauma Advisory Council Lynne.
Trauma Services Backboard Removal Project. First off, we need a volunteer please……
Sarah McPherson Dr. A. Anton April 18, 2002
9-1-1 COORDINATION WORKGROUP Samar Muzaffar, MD MPH.
Time Critical Diagnosis Rural-Urban Workgroup Samar Muzaffar, MD MPH.
California Stroke Registry Right Care Initiative Meeting August 13, 2012.
National Ski Patrol, Outdoor Emergency Care, 5 th Ed. ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ BRADY Incident Command and Triage Chapter.
Limmer et al., Emergency Care, 10 th Edition © 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Emergency Medical Care.
Assessing Hospital and Health System Preparedness and Response Helen Burstin, M.D., M.P.H. Director Center for Primary Care Research Agency for Healthcare.
North West Kansas Regional Trauma Council KDHE Advisory Committee on Trauma.
OHTrac Patient Tracking Carol Jacobson, RN March 31, 2010 EMA Directors Spring Conference 3/31/10EMA 1.
Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Paula Adkison Deborah Markenson 10/29/08 Regional EMS Committees.
Mosby items and derived items © 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 1 Introduction to EMS Systems.
Current EMS System. Define and enumerate the general principles of the current EMS system, its various component and various rule of each and every component.
Impact Mitigation Plan ~San Jose Medical Center Closure~ Santa Clara County Emergency Medical Services Agency Revised 11/15/04.
WI STATE TRAUMA SYSTEM Rick Barney, M.D. -State EMS Medical Director & E.D. Physician - Beloit Ray Georgen, M.D. - State Trauma Advisory Council Member.
ED Stream Workshop Acute MOC
Northeast Colorado All Hazards Region 1 Mass Casualty Incident Plan Training Section 8 – Roles & Responsibilities.
Arkansas Emergency Medical Services for Children Program Arkansas Department of Health Section of EMS & Trauma Systems 5800 W. 10 th Street, Suite 800.
Large numbers of ill people seek care; EDs, clinics, and medical offices are crowded; there’s a surge on medical facilities; Delays in seeing a provider;
Limmer, First Responder: A Skills Approach, 7 th ed. © 2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Chapter 1 Introduction to the EMS System.
TIME CRITICAL DIAGNOSIS
Mosby items and derived items © 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Introduction to EMS Systems.
U.S. Public Health Service Service Access Teams U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) SAT Role in ESF #8 and HHS activities CAPT Veronica Gordon, SAT-4 Team.
2010 State Trauma Update Kansas Medical Society Paul B. Harrison, MD FACS Chair, Advisory Committee on Trauma.
Introduction to the Emergency Operations Center City of Santa Cruz 2011 EOC Training and Exercise.
Pulse Oximetry Screening for Critical Congenital Heart Disease (CCHD): The Wisconsin Experience Region IV Genetics Meeting September 11, 2012 Sharon Fleischfresser.
S-SV EMS MICN Course Module 6 EMResource, HAvBED Poll, ED & Census Poll, Hospital Diversion S-SV EMS Agency MICN Training (Updated ) 1.
The Status of the Nation’s Emergency Management System Gail L. Warden Chair, Committee on The Future of Emergency Care in the United States Health System.
Chapter 9 Nursing. Description Registered nurses (RNs) – treat and educate patients and the public about various medical conditions Provide advice and.
Emergency Preparedness. Proposed Emergency Preparedness Rules NFR/LMC §19.326(a) deleted and moved to § for Emergency Preparedness Rules Places.
Rural Level IV Trauma Center; More than a community hospital
Introduction to Emergency Medical Care
[Exercise Name] [Date]
Region 2 North Healthcare Coalition
EMResource, HAvBED Poll, ED & Census Poll, Hospital Diversion
Agenda What and why? Regional system components Path forward.
EMS/Trauma System Overview
Arkansas Department of Health
Agenda What and why? Regional system components Campaigns
How Prepared Are We? A Workshop for Pediatric Surge Preparedness
Statewide System of Care for Stroke in Arkansas 2019 AR SAVES Telestroke Conference September 26, 2019 James Bledsoe, MD,FACS State EMS and Trauma.
Let’s hear it for the Band. What does the data say
Presentation transcript:

Arkansas Department of Health Trauma Overview

Act 393 of 2009-Trauma System Act Trauma System: an organized and coordinated plan within a state that is integrated with the local public health system and delivers the full range of care to patients with severe or life threatening injuries

Trauma Center Definition A trauma center is a hospital which has received a Trauma Center designation certificate after successfully completing a rigorous site survey to determine, based on resource availabity and overall capability, the appropriate level of designation

Trauma Center Levels Level I – comprehensive clinical care and community resource (education, research and outreach) Level II – comprehensive clinical care Level III – treatment of mild and moderate single system injuries Level IV – stabilization and transfer

Act 393 of 2009-Trauma System Act

Benefits of a Trauma System Trauma system will shorten the time getting injured patients to definitive care - one state with a “call center”, as Arkansas has, reports an average of 4 hours saved per patient Will often allow for patient to receive state- of-the-art care within the “golden hour”, which is the first 60 minutes following the injury

Benefits of a Trauma System Should reduce deaths by trauma in motor vehicle accidents by 25% (168 lives) (2005 data) Should provide a tangible cost savings in motor vehicle crash deaths of $193 million per year (2005 data) Our developing statewide trauma system will help save lives!

Implementation Trauma Section Staff 1 Trauma Section Chief 3 Trauma Program Managers 3 Trauma Program Nurses 1 Epidemiologist to assist in data collection 2 Administrative Assistants Sub-grants to hospitals, EMS providers, and EMS training sites Communications system & Call Center

Implementation Governor’s Trauma Advisory Council (Trauma Regional Advisory Councils (TRACS) Hospital designation Other sub-grants and contracts (injury prevention, rehabilitation, system enhancements, etc.)

Arkansas Department of Health ATCC Overview Getting the Right Patient to the Right Hospital at the Right Time

The ATCC (Trauma Comm) Created in 2009 with Act 393 As part of the Arkansas Trauma System Purpose: To facilitate “prompt communication & coordination of available hospital resources” “Call center operators will triage and advise on transport of patients to hospitals with the appropriate capability to provide optimum care”

The Call Center MEMS selected through formal bid Located in Little Rock headquarters Building on existing infrastructure Adding 2 new work stations Plus 2 “surge” work stations Dedicated supervisor (Jeff Tabor)

Call Center Medical Oversight Medical Director – Dr. Chuck Mason Two Assistant Medical Directors Dr. Wendal Pahl Dr. Mrlon Doucet Someone on call 24/7 Duties Oversee call center operations Work directly with the TRACs Develop call center protocols & procedures Participate in TAC process improvement

What is the Value Added? More reliably identify appropriate facility the first time Minimize subsequent patient transfers Initiate ground/air transport faster Eliminate EMS diversions for trauma Reduce time required to complete hospital to hospital transfers

The Call Center’s Role As a resource center As a coordination center As a data collection point The call center will support, not direct, the medic in the field

Bottom Line EMS and the hospitals know: Who the patient is What their condition is When they need to move The Call Center will help coordinate: Where they go How they get there And collect process improvement data

How will it work? 911 call is received in normal way First responders and EMS respond Medics will triage per Trauma Pre-Hospital Triage protocol Patients trauma will be assessed as: Major, moderate or minor Determine appropriate facility Most will still go to local hospital(s)

Communication System Contact the call center from the scene by using the Trauma Radios by either being on Trauma 1 or Trauma 2 channel, see map for which channel you are designated to Determine patient’s triage status Call center staff and medical director available if needed Hospital destination determined Call center coordinates with hospital Direct communication links available

Dashboard All facilities participate Hospitals report on web based system Status visible to all EMS agencies, hospitals, ADH and the call center Accurate and timely data critical Details can be tailored for each TRAC

Trauma Bands Used to track patients through the entire process and connect EMS data with hospital records Provided by ADH with unique number Attached to patient at first encounter Will be the primary tracking method used by the call center and ADH

How does it work? EMS Scene Assessments Quick and accurate front line trauma triage Performed on all trauma patients Designated as Major, Moderate or Minor All Major & Moderate patients are to be entered into the Trauma Registry & the ATCC notified. Transport to Right Hospital at the Right time!

How does it work? ED Assessments Performed on all walk up’s, drive up’s, and EMS delivered trauma patients. Reassures EMS assessments, possible changes in patient condition Determines if this is the Right hospital for the Right patient at the Right time. The ATCC staff will perform Secondary Trauma Triage Guidelines upon notification of patients with both EMS and ED’s

Transport Guidelines ATCC will recommend & assist with: Ground transport by on scene EMS agency Ground transport with higher level Intercept Air transport by HEMS agency Weather permitting Standards for HEMS are: Day Night Pilots discretion above minimums

Call Center Summary In short, some patients will have a longer ground or air transport time, and WILL NOT go to the CLOSEST hospital, but will be transported to a hospital that can meet their trauma needs. Transfer of patients from a lower level hospital to a higher level of care will be decreased from the average of 4-6 hours to 2. Regional Trauma systems will be a key role to keeping patients near their families.

Thank you for participating in this training! For the Trauma/AWIN Radio Training, please open the attached presentation titled XTL 2500 Motorola Trauma Radio Presentation If you have any questions please contact: Joe W. Martin, Trauma Program Manager Arkansas Department of Health, Trauma Section 4815 W. Markham St. Slot 4 Little Rock, AR (501) (office) (501) (cell)