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trauma response within the hospital
Gross, Ronald Ronald.Gross at baystatehealth.orgMon Aug 3 14:42:20 BST 2009
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Chuck, You are so right. The last point is a lesson that is always taught - and then frequently either forgotten or simply ignored with the "no guts, no glory" mentality. Ron -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Krin135 at aol.com Sent: Monday, August 03, 2009 9:24 AM To: trauma-list at trauma.org Subject: Re: trauma response within the hospital Dr. McSwain: Many of the hospitals I have worked at here in Missouri use Paramedics and EMT-B's in tech positions, giving a nice 'away team' for such situations. Others have the ambulance crews co located with the hospital. As a former field medic and military doc myself, I have the training and the comfort to attend patients in 'other than optimal' circumstances, as I suspect does Dr. Gross and some of the others on the list. One point, however: unless you are at a facility where you have 'hot and cold running docs,' the doc is probably the last one who needs to go to a single casualty field site, unless there is need for specific skills: i.e., true field surgery. One of the tricks taught at the Combat Casualty Care Course (one of the flagship field medicine courses for physicians, PAs, dentists, veterinarians and nurses) is the field triage officer is NEVER a commissioned officer, and only rarely a warrant officer PA. Leave that to the senior medics. ck Charles S. Krin In a message dated 8/3/2009 07:04:03 Central Standard Time, nmcswai at tulane.edu writes: We have been doing that for years. Works well Ron, Do you train you ED personal to the EMT-B level? If you want them to respond to those falls from the building, 'Man Down' etc. You must train and equip them to do the fulfill the responsibilities that you have assigned to them. Also equipment, Backboards, Small defibrillators, small ET and drug kit You cannot ask a person to do a job for which they are not prepared...not fair to the patient either and that is the most important thing Norman Norman McSwain MD Professor, Tulane School of Medicine Trauma Director, Charity Hospital Trauma Center norman.mcswain at tulane.edu 504 988 5111 **************A Good Credit Score is 700 or Above. See yours in just 2 easy steps! (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1222846709x1201493018/aol?redir=http://www.freecreditreport.com/pm/default.aspx?sc=668072&hmpgID=115&bcd =JulystepsfooterNO115) -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email communication and any attachments may contain confidential and privileged information for the use of the designated recipients named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you have received this communication in error and that any review, disclosure, dissemination, distribution or copying of it or its contents is prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please reply to the sender immediately or by telephone at (413) 794-0000 and destroy all copies of this communication and any attachments. For further information regarding Baystate Health's privacy policy, please visit our Internet web site at http://www.baystatehealth.com.
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