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Trauma team dynamics
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Journal of Trauma & Treatment

ISSN: 2167-1222

Open Access

Trauma team dynamics


3rd Annual Congress and Medicare Expo on Trauma and Critical Care

March 13-14, 2017 London, UK

Dimitrios Karakitsos

Keck Medical School USC(University of Southern California), USA

Keynote: J Trauma Treat

Abstract :

Background: In trauma care, teams of experts are using modern technology and techniques to secure life and limb, conserve organs in acute peril and manage chronic complications. Trauma care also requires the coordination of individuals with different biases, priorities, personalities, skill sets and timelines. Although the American College of Surgeons� Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) course has been the backbone of trauma care, it focuses on the sole practitioner, rather than how we function in larger teams and complex situations. Methods: In 1977, a large aviation disaster has led NASA to the development of crew resource management training. These ideas have been adapted to medicine and resulted in crisis resource management (CRM) training. Human errors in medicine are estimated to contribute to approximately 100,000 annual deaths in the United States alone. Simulation trauma team training typically encompasses five keys areas: communication, leadership and followership, resource utilization, problem solving and situational awareness. While even routine civilian trauma can be challenging, add to this the potential for natural disasters, terrorist attacks, and other such fluid environments and CRM training becomes imperative. Finally, CRM logistics have led to the development of temporary constructs such as Emerging Multi-Organizational Networks (EMON) which consist of taskoriented and mission specific collaborations of individuals and resources. Conclusions: The addition of CRM skills to modern trauma care is of growing interest. Whether the former may improve team performance, team empathy and patient outcomes is an area of on-going research.

Biography :

Dimitrios Karakitsos is an Associate Professor in Medicine at University of South Carolina, School of Medicine and an Adjunct Associate Professor in Critical Care at Keck Medical School, University of Southern California. He is an international, well-published expert and Researcher in “Critical care ultrasound and crisis resource management in trauma”. Currently, he is affiliated to the Trauma Center of King Saud Medical City (KSMC) in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
 

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1048

Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Trauma & Treatment peer review process verified at publons

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