ATLS training

Ronald Gross Rgross at harthosp.org
Thu Oct 12 20:12:57 BST 2006


Rajesh,

Intrude?  Hell, your comments are well stated and - at least to this
surgeon - greatly appreciated!

Best wishes,
Ron

>>> "Rajesh" <rajesh84 at asianetindia.com> 10/12/2006 1:02 PM >>>
It has been an interesting "discussion".

Our trauma victims are often carted to the nearest ill equipped
hospital in
the next available cab or van and most of them do survive. The first we
know
about it is usually when the vehicle screeches to a halt outside the
emergency dept. There is no "ETA 3 minutes" .

Our average post-trauma mortality is supposed to be 7 per day across
the
whole of India.

I did the ATLS in Manchester,UK during my training and I think it is a
good
course but that it is all it is, a course to show you ONE effective way
of
dealing with the acutely traumatised patient.The manual itself says
"this is
not the only way". I used to be in the Trauma team (occassionally)
while
working in the UK years ago.

I think many of us are missing the point here -  a person does best
what he
does regularly . Out in the field a trained experienced paramedic is
probably worth more than a few orthopaedic/general surgeons put
together and
vice versa in a hospital. Give me an arthroscope and i am probably
better
than many orthopods but show me a laryngoscope in an emergency and i
may not
know one end from the other.

Someone said" As an ATLS instructor I can tell you that
it is absolutely frightening how many general surgeons and ED-program
graduates, not to mention orthopods,....that have clearly no clue what
the
basics are (this is AFTER several hours of lecture on the subject)."

This is exactly how I would feel if someone asked me to teach shoulder
or
wrist arthroscopy to a group of medical studemts or junior residents. I
am
not saying ATLS is that difficult ;-) but to someone who is not used
to
thinking in terms of milliseconds of survival time,it is a bit too much
to
take in especially if they are not confronting trauma on a daily
basis.

We are all good in our own fields (or atleast we believe we are)- let
us not
forget that it is not just the paramedics (which we lack here in
india)or
the flashy ambulances(which we lack in many parts of India) or the
Emergency
docs or the orthopods or the surgeons or the ATLS instructors or the
ATLS
providers who save patients, it is the whole team of dedicated,
overworked,
and (usually) underpaid people who for some reason or the other have
chosen
to become part of the team. I am sure there are good paramedics and
bad
paramedics just as there are good and bad docs (of different
specialties).

Some patients will die irrespective of what we do and many survive in
spite
of what we do.

sorry to intrude.

thanks

rajesh

Dr.K.R.Rajesh, MS(Orth),Diplomate National Board(Ortho),FRCS
(Gen),FRCS(Orth)
Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon
Division of Arthroscopy ,Upper Limb Surgery & Joint Replacement
Surgery.
Cosmopolitan Hospital
Trivandrum,Kerala,India.




-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org 
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]On Behalf Of Krin135 at aol.com 
Sent: 12 October 2006 21:41
To: trauma-list at trauma.org 
Subject: Re: ATLS training



In a message dated 10/12/2006 10:59:15 AM Central Standard Time,
Rgross at harthosp.org writes:

Rick,
I will tell you how I do things in the field.  I will do  whatever it
is
I can to care for the patient till the calvary  arrives.  And when the
EMS personnel do arrive, I give them my report,  step aside and hand
over
the care to them with the statement, "How can I  best help other than
staying out of your way?"  If they need - and ask  for - my help or my
clinical expertise, I will give it.  If I need to  go with them to the
receiving facility, I will do so - although that   has been necessary
only a couple of times in my 30 years since graduating  from med
school
(and as my wife will tell you, I always stop, if just to  ask if I can
help).

In short, I think it was Bill who said it  best;, we, as surgeons, can
be of best use in the ED, and that is the best  place for the patient,
as
opposed to the field, where time is of the  essence, and transport
should
never be delayed by a good samaritan who  wants to do more than is
necessary in the pre-hospital  setting.




As my other post shows, I heartily agree with you on this, Ron...and in
my
19 years since graduation, I've helped out on more than a few scenes,
usually
with medics whom I have helped train and knew their protocols, and
haven't
yet
 had to ride in on any of them.

About the only time that I can think that I provided truly 'advanced
care'
on the scene was one where I was 'First In' and helped with a messy
extrication.  The patient had an open dislocation of his ankle, and,
after
the
extrication, I  was able to reduce the dislocation and restore the
blood
flow to his
foot.

Outside of that, it's been ABCD and help with the lifting...

ck
Charles S. Krin, DO FAAFP
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