ED's role in trauma
Hardcastle, Tim, Dr <tch at sun.ac.za>
tch at sun.ac.za
Fri Oct 6 06:13:06 BST 2006
Joe
Well said
Tim
-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]On Behalf Of Joe Nemeth
Sent: Thursday, October 05, 2006 8:15 PM
To: trauma-list at trauma.org
Subject: ED's role in trauma
Karim et al,
to start off I work in Canada...not the US...this may be a key in the
way we do things, so...
1)in Montreal, there are 2 level 1 trauma centers, the MGH being
one...it is run by a dedicated group of TTL's...(approx 50/50 btwn.
emergentologists/trauma surgeons)
2)although our trauma surgeons are great (trained in the US) in large I
think they would rather us handle a difficult airway, place a quick
central line, handle the initials of an obviously toxidromic trauma
patient, etc...
3)have heard from 1)recent colleague, EM trained, who recently went
down to NYC to take on a position of TTL/EM doc as well as 2)our EM
residents who go down south to Miami/Baltimore...what they reports is
shocking to us, even if it were only half true,...i.e. reminiscent of
what Karim alluded to...no thinking surgeons, wanting only the
obviously OR material but couldn't be bothered to take anything else,
PanCT without thinking critically...
from the excellent handling of the recent Dawson college shooting
massacre as a group of physicians (trauma surgeons/Emergentologists)we
have learned the following:
1)we have to work together
2) we complement each other
3)we need to leave egos at the door
Joe
Joe Nemeth MD
Emergency Medicine
Montreal Children's Hospital
Montreal General Hospital
McGill University
--
trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG
To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html
More information about the trauma-list
mailing list