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An authoritative definition of "trauma"

Gross, Ronald Ronald.Gross at baystatehealth.org
Tue Mar 31 18:52:55 BST 2009





-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Bjorn, Pret
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 1:51 PM
To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list
Subject: RE: An authoritative definition of "trauma"

What's "too long?"  A hundred and twenty years?  "Traumatic life events"
were described in psychology literature as early as 1889.  By contrast,
the disease definition of trauma we lay claim to is the truly neological
version.

Folks, neither usage is going away.  Heave a sigh and move on.

Pret



-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Blueflightmedic
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 8:28 AM
To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list'
Subject: RE: An authoritative definition of "trauma"


Easy; you are being too inclusive. Trauma is injury sustained from the
application of force to tissue excess to the tissue's ability to handle
it.

Calling psychological upset 'trauma' has confused separate entities for
too
long.

-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]
On Behalf Of Howard Berkowitz
Sent: 27 March 2009 13:51
To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list
Subject: An authoritative definition of "trauma"


Rather to my surprise, there is no pure definition of "trauma" at
Trauma.org. Here's my challenge: I'm dealing with a wiki article where
some
advocates want to focus on stress disorders (to say nothing of recovered
memory therapies) that are secondary only to psychogenic events, and
mostly
child abuse (and, in this case, ritual abuse conspircies).  They are
preempting the word "trauma" as a synonym for child abuse; they are
ignoring
even combat stress.

I want to start a core article on trauma that then can branch into the
sort
of multisystem trauma that is of chief interest here, but also include
psychogenic traumas. Once that structure exists, I'd like to invite
participation, but I need to solve the immediate hijacking of the
concept.

If there really is no good formal source that can be used, can a
consensus
definition be created here?

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