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Anesthesia and Trauma
Errington Thompson errington at erringtonthompson.comMon Aug 21 04:23:58 BST 2006
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I think that everyone would agree but how to identify that person at midnight? My problem is that anesthesia wants to have their own time with the patient on every case except those that are being rushed back. Errington C. Thompson, MD, FACS, FCCM Trauma/Surgical Critical Care Mission Hospital Asheville, NC Author - A Letter to America www.whereistheoutrage.net <http://www.erringtonthompsonmd.com/> Everyone deserves to make an informed decision - Errington Thompson, MD _____ From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Hall, John R Sent: Sunday, August 20, 2006 9:22 PM To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list Subject: RE: Anesthesia and Trauma I think that every procedure should have the best person available doing it. Thus, I have anesthesia alerted whenever there is a trauma alert. If the patient needs intubation, they are there within minutes and always there prior to patient going to OR. _____ From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org on behalf of Errington Thompson Sent: Sat 8/19/2006 5:30 AM To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list' Subject: Anesthesia and Trauma Ok, help me with this one. When a Code Trauma (highest level of activation) is called should anesthesia be a part of the team? Once the patient is evaluated and if found to need to go to the OR urgently should the patient be taken to anesthesia holding. If so how long in holding is too long? The bottom-line to all of my questions is the role of anesthesia in the trauma service. thanks, Errington C. Thompson, MD, FACS, FCCM Trauma/Surgical Critical Care Mission Hospital Asheville, NC Author - A Letter to America www.whereistheoutrage.net Everyone deserves to make an informed decision - Errington Thompson, MD -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Ronald Gross Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2006 4:58 PM To: trauma-list at trauma.org Subject: Re: Alcohol Screening "We need to worry less about the insurance response, and more about injury prevention and address the risk taking behaviors of these drivers!" Thank you, Laura.......I couldn't have said it better! Ron >>> "LAURA STEPHENS" <LSTEPH at parknet.pmh.org> 08/17/06 3:03 PM >>> Working in a level one trauma center, I have often drawn both legal blood alcohol levels, as well as diagnostic BAC's. The legal blood alcohol levels were always drawn, and placed in blood tubes provided by the officer, after obtaining consent from the patient. Betadine was used in place of alcohol, as to not affect the results, and careful documentation was completed for the chain of custody, to include which officer took posession of the tube, and badge number. It was also clearly documented that betadine was was used in lieu of alcohol, and allowed to air dry before the venipuncture was completed. This was to allow for better prosecution of the case. When it came to blood alcohol levels drawn as part of the trauma lab panel, it was not treated as carefully as legal blood alcohol's were. Alcohol pads were and are routinely used to draw labs, which are generally drawn at the same time the IV was placed. We routinely send BAC's and urine tox on all trauma patients, to identify those with potential alcohol or drug related problems. You cannot address problems, unless you know they exist, and even though there may be enough non-laboratory evidence of alcohol intoxication, i.e. smell, or self report, that without hard evidence the patient may not be willing to discuss or admit to the alcohol related trauma. In the 8 1/2 years I have worked in this trauma center, I can only recall 2-3 payment denials due to positive testing of ETOH. We need to worry less about the insurance response, and more about injury prevention and address the risk taking behaviors of these drivers! I applaud the ACS mandate, and I think the medical community should embrace this mandate, and put in place interventions and injury prevention programs, so maybe we will have fewer alcohol related traumas. LStephens, RN, CEN Dallas, TX >>> bryanboling at gmail.com 8/17/06 9:47 AM >>> When I was a tech in the ED, we used to draw tubes for the police. However, they were ADDITIONAL tubes drawn for the purpose of evidence collection, not our regular labs, and it was with the patient's "consent." I put consent in quotes because we have an implied consent law here that says if a police officer suscpects someone of driving under the influence, he can request they give a blood/breath/urine sample (most times they get the choice - breath is free, blood or urine they MIGHT have to pay for - but if they're in the ED for treatment, blood test is free too, and dependending on the nature and injuries, might be the "required" way, but I digress...). They can refuse, but refusal gets their license suspended. So, I never ahd a patient refuse when it was put to them like that. We drew the labs into special tubes with the officer observing and then had to sign a form saying we'd drawn it from the right patient and the tubes were covered (sealed I suppose) with a label that the officer had to cosign with us. I suppose that prevents tampering down the line? Then they took the tubes to some other lab they didn't go to the hospital lab. We routinely drew BALs on trauma patients and typically ran a urine drug screen if there was any indication they might have anything on board. But this was simply to know what we were dealing with pharmacologically (and the occasional ED game "guess the BAL") and not for any kind of legal proceeding. bryan On 8/17/06, Lorick Fox, PA-C <lorick at lorick.org> wrote: > > > Since there is no chain of custody, I would be surprised if a blood > alcohol > obtained in the hospital was admissible for criminal prosecution. > On the other hand, I have heard of police officers watching blood tubes > drawn and then seizing them as evidence. > > Anyone actually KNOW: > (1) if hospital labs are admissible and > (2) if the "seizure of blood tubes" is anything more than urban legend? > > BTW, I am leaving Egypt next month to join Cardiovascular Associates, LLC > in > the Norfolk, Virginia area www.cval.org (doing EP). However, I will be > returning to volunteer EMS as well, so I'll actually see more trauma. > > Lorick Fox, MPAS, PA-C > SEAVIN Medical > Gianaclis Support Complex > 011-20-3-448-2335x2001 or 2207 > www.Lorick.org > > > > -- > trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG > To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: > http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html > -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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