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History of Trauma System Development in California

History of Trauma System Development in California. David Hoyt, MD, FACS Professor and Chairman Department of Surgery University of California, Irvine Orange, California. 18 th &19 th Century Health Care Delivery. House calls No rapid treatments Kitchen table surgery.

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History of Trauma System Development in California

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  1. History of Trauma System Development in California David Hoyt, MD, FACS Professor and Chairman Department of Surgery University of California, Irvine Orange, California

  2. 18th &19th Century Health Care Delivery • House calls • No rapid treatments • Kitchen table surgery

  3. All admissions needed approval Patients were refused admission: Incurable Cancer Epilepsy Contagious Smallpox Could not pay Paupers sent to ‘almshouse’ Not ‘worthy of admission’ Conditions of immorality Prostitution/STDs Alcoholism Unwed mothers 18th & 19th Century Hospitals

  4. Where Did Emergency Patients Go? The Receiving Hospital • A hospital that would ‘receive’ all emergency patients • Los Angeles City Receiving Hospital System • Received ‘ambulance cases’ • Transferred to County General or other Hospitals

  5. Early Hospital Emergency Care • ‘Emergency Room’ or ‘Accident Room’ • Cared for people who “had no place else to go”

  6. Admission log - Los Angeles City Receiving Hospital • April - June 1908 • 7.3 patients/day

  7. The Patients & Situations of 1908 • Trauma • Pedestrian vs. Streetcar • Traumatic arrest • Horses • Bites, kicks • “Horse fell on him” • Bar fights • Knifes, bottles, fists • Automobiles? • Minor cuts bruises • Industrial injures • Cuts, crush, amputation • Burns - nitrate movie film

  8. The Patients & Situations of 1908 • Social problems: • Child abuse • “Hit by father with board” • Spouse abuse • “Beaten by husband” • Suicide • GSW head, chest • Potassium permanganate

  9. The Patients & Situations of 1908 • Abortion • “Refused to give doctor’s name” • Addictions: • Alcohol • H.B.D. • H.B.D.V.M. • Opiates (morphine) • Tx = Coffee (caffeine) into gastric tube

  10. The Patients & Situations of 1908 • Asthma Tx = Chloral Hydrate & Strychnine (stimulant) • Cardiac arrest Tx = Adrenaline • Sexuality issues: • Gonorrhea “suppression of urine” • “Injury to perineum” • “Slipped on apple” • “How injured: masturbation” • “Treatment: Bedrest”

  11. Early Hospital Emergency Care • Hospital ‘Emergency rooms’ staffed by: • Doctors without a practice • Doctors working ‘overtime’ • Emergency Medicine - 1971

  12. Emergency Nursing “Triage” - emergency nursing

  13. The Hoover Commission • 1923 -Secretary of Commerce • Reviewed the mortality crisis with the automobile • 20,000 deaths/year • Results • Sweeping recommendations • Roads, traffic safety, licensing • No call for care systems

  14. Ambulances & Emergency Transport • Began in War Time • Walt Disney served in WW I - France

  15. The Early Ambulance Experience • Earliest focus was on safe, comfortable trip • Why Rush to the hospital? • No emergency treatment on arrival • No defibrillation or trauma surgery • 1920s California Vehicle Code: • “After a collision . . . transport the injured in whichever vehicle still operates . . .”

  16. Who Operated Most Ambulance Services? • Adopted by Funeral Services • Had a vehicle that could transport a body in a supine position • Could gain goodwill in community

  17. Who Operated Our Ambulances? Some Los Angeles area companies

  18. Local California Dispatch • 1969 Automobile club study • 70 different ‘ambulance phone numbers’ servicing a 26 mile section of San Diego freeway

  19. California’s Original Minimum Ambulance Training Requirements • One crewman must have Red Cross Advanced first aid card • Other attendant (within 15 days of employment); • Enrolled in basic first aid class • Complete advanced first aid class within 90 days.

  20. Ambulance Documentation & Billing • Most documentation related to costs/charges • Taxi meters would assure accurate fees

  21. Mass Casualty Incident - Pre-EMS • August 1, 1966 • University of Texas Austin • Sniper - Charles Whitman fired from top of 27 story clock tower • 15 killed • 31 wounded • Six funeral homes sent 13 ambulances

  22. Trauma Magnitude of the Problem • 1966 -“The neglected epidemic”

  23. What Changed • A pre-hospital curriculum • Pre-hospital Care became a profession • 1970-72

  24. Emergency • In 1972 the TV show Emergency debuted • The Jack Webb creation

  25. 1970-1980 • Developing local Trauma Systems: • Los Angeles EMS • Orange EMS • San Diego EMS • Santa Clara EMS

  26. 1980 • Development of California’s State EMS Leadership • State law added Division 2.5 of the Health & Safety Code • Established the Emergency Medical Services Authority • LEMSA Model Started

  27. 1983 • Trauma Systems added to the Health & Safety Code • Allow, but not require, development of local trauma care systems • System based upon a series of local, optional trauma care systems

  28. 1986 • Trauma care regulations established • California Code of Regulations, Title 22, Division 9, Chapter 7 • Trauma Care Systems • Promulgated to provide minimum standards for local trauma systems & locally designated trauma centers

  29. Trauma SystemA Public Private Partnership Scripp’s Mercy Sharp Memorial Palomar Medical Center County Health EMS Scripp’s Memorial Children’s Hospital UCSD Medical Center

  30. Trauma CenterCommitment • ALL departments • Trauma Surgeon • Other physicians • Critical care • Neurosurgery • Orthopedics • Plastics and ENT • Anesthesia • Radiology • Nurses • Every other staff member

  31. Trauma Center Standards • Trauma Center • Designation standards • Data collection • Quality improvement protocols

  32. San Diego County • CNS & Non CNS- 1982 • 12/90 Preventable Deaths (Amherst Study) • System--------------1984 • 1984 • 3/112 (3m) Preventable • 1986 • 11/541 Preventable Current rate < 1%

  33. Significant Accomplishments • Paramedic Training • Regional EMS systems • 911 • ATLS • Trauma Care standards • Verification • National Trauma Data Bank Disease Management Model

  34. The Infrastructure

  35. Started 2005

  36. The Evidence • All measurement techniques: 8-10% mortality reduction

  37. The National Study on Costs and Outcomes of Trauma Center CareNSCOT 25% - Mortality Reduction <55

  38. The LEMSA Model – A Story of Great Success

  39. Why Not Everywhere

  40. Trauma Centers in the United States – All Levels Why not everywhere ? ▲ Level I & II ● Level III-V Plotted by Hospital ZIP Code Challenges ???

  41. Percent of ISS > 15 Adult PatientsTreated at a Level I/II Center Missing Patients

  42. 1987 • Assembly Office of Research described California’s trauma care system: • Medical & financial emergency, pointing to financial losses experienced by trauma centers & a need to financially stabilize trauma care systems • Some hospitals (particularly in Los Angeles) dropped trauma center designation, citing financial losses.

  43. 1980’s-1990’s • Closure or threatened closure of trauma centers in several areas of the state resulted in media attention & policy initiatives to increase state subsidies or develop alternative funding sources • Physicians & hospitals indicated the root problem of emergency & trauma care issues was uncompensated care

  44. System Finance

  45. Threats to Trauma Care Main Reason All Reasons

  46. DespiteLegislative Support • Trauma Systems Reauthorization • Federal Agenda Inconsistent

  47. 1980’s-1990’s • Several legislative proposals to provide funding for trauma care surfaced – most failed

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