Subacute Care Surgery (was trauma activation and stratification)
paul.middleton
paul.middleton at usa.net
Wed Oct 4 00:36:02 BST 2006
Ken
I am eager to learn. Do you mean needed for diagnosis or therapy? Therapy -
undoubtedly. Diagnosis - please provide references for my edification,
particularly those which compare surgeons and emergency physicians with
objective outcome measures.
Paul
Dr Paul M Middleton
RGN MBBS FRCS(Eng) DipIMCRCS(Ed) FFAEM FACEM
Emergency Medicine
Sydney
NSW
-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]
On Behalf Of KMATTOX at aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, 4 October 2006 8:49 AM
To: trauma-list at trauma.org
Subject: Re: Subacute Care Surgery (was trauma activation and
stratification)
In a message dated 10/3/2006 4:08:52 P.M. Central Standard Time,
karim at trauma.org writes:
1. Because over the last 30 years surgeons have abdicated from the care of
the emergency surgical patient. &
This has not been the experience of the vast majority of the hospitals
around the world
k
2. Because it's cheaper to have one resuscitation area in a hospital.
What are you talking about? A resuscitation area is a resuscitation area.
and the person who needs resuscitating after major trauma really needs a
surgeon, at least in the eyes and experience of virtually every evaluation
which
has occurred during the past 30 years.
k
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