Operating Room Resuscitations
Jason Van der Velde
rescue at doctors.org.uk
Fri Feb 1 13:34:00 GMT 2008
John has really hit the nail on the head, well said...
Health Care "Management" and Bureaucracy is destroying
trauma patient care. I believe that the root of our
arguments is NOT clinical, but resources. Surge capacity
is "not economically viable" says the short term
thinkers, that is until a disaster... and then the blame
falls on us the clinicians, typical...
In third world health care systems like the NHS in the UK,
they have no choice but to fight the good fight everyday
with imposed targets etc. A&E trolleys/wards have become a
side effect of years of underfunding where patient targets
have outgrown common human decency let alone trauma
patient care, EVERYONE should read the NCEPOD report,
"Trauma Who Cares?" to realise that the NHS once a "crown
jewel" is now the crown's turd...
My latter is not a dig on Emergency Medicine, FAR FAR FAR
from it, Hey I'm an Anaesthesiologist with a special
interest in EM...! EM is the glue in the very fabric of
good trauma patient care, recognising time critical
injuries and ensuring the patient gets the definitive care
they need...
Definitive care to me is the right cloth to cover that
individuals' needs. And some have a lot more need for
covering than others!!! If the cloth (resource) is not
there, the glue (EM) has to do its level best with what
little scraps of material it has left over. SO STOP
BLAMING THE GLUE if it does not hold the scraps together
well!!!
The real argument is ensuring the right cloth is available
at all times. Off to do some more tailoring...
Dr. van der Velde
EMDM-A
ATACC Disaster Response Coordinator
Trauma Research Fellow in Anaesthesia
Message: 16
Date: Fri, 1 Feb 2008 19:37:06 +1000
From: John Holmes <docjohnholmes at hotmail.com>
Subject: RE: Operating Room Resuscitations
To: "Trauma & Critical Care mailing list"
<trauma-list at trauma.org>
Message-ID: <BLU131-W22D016B862FA337F8F4561B4300 at phx.gbl>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
I really cannot believe the silliness of the proposition
that the ED Resus room should be bypassed. Those of you
making such propositions seem to be living in a world of
unlimited resources. In the real world, access to ICUs /
ORs etc is usually extremely limited. In most hospitals
the theatre suites are fully booked and the ICUs fully
occupied. Further, in other than the largest centres,
these precious resources rarely have immediate manpower
available. By NECESSITY the ED provides acute care,
including resuscitation. Of course it should go without
saying that unstable patients who are in need of
definitive care - be that in the OR or the angiosuite -
should get to those places ASAP. But many patients in
resus rooms do not need hyperurgent definitive
intervention. And this is even more so with non trauma
cases. In fact many do not eventually even require to go
to ICU. The ED provides not only early assessment and
treatment but also a gatekeeping role.
In reality the ED HAS developed "far beyond immediate
care". The UK's "4 hour rule" "was politically imposed in
the UK and has nothing to do with medical care and
everything to do with bureacrats' targets. It is anathema
to those of us who see EM as part of a spectrum of care
working seamlessly with the ICU/CCU/OR etc but NOT
excluded or bypassed.
John
Dr John L Holmes
Director Emergency Medicine Training
AMC & OLVG
Amsterdam
The Netherlands
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