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The Credit Belongs to Everyone. Some deserve special recognition:Lynn Bennink
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1. The Central RTCC James W. Davis MD, FACS
Chief of Trauma, CRMC
Professor of Clinical Surgery UCSF/Fresno
2. The Credit Belongs to Everyone Some deserve special recognition:
Lynn Bennink CRMC Fresno
Linda Diaz Merced EMS
Debbie Becker Fresno EMS
Chuck Baucom Merced EMS
Clarence Teem Tuolumne EMS
3. The Request Regional Representation
Short and Long term goals
Successes and Challenges
How Central Region can foster California State Trauma System
4. The Central Region Central California covers approximately 32,000 sq miles or 20% of California.
Rural in nature with large areas of agriculture
Bounded by the Sierra Nevada mountain range
The region serves a population of approximately 3.5 million or 10% of California population.
consists of 12 counties (25% of the counties in California),
5 LEMSAs (2 regional and 3 single counties),
1 level I Trauma Center
3 level II Trauma Centers
5. The Central Region
6. CRTCC History and Process August 2008, Meeting
All interested parties from the State Summit
Executive Steering Committee formed
Early Decision: Process Driven
Bylaws
Mission & Vision
Goals
Membership
7. CRTCC Bylaws Guiding Principles:
Inclusive, not exclusive
Collaborative
KISS
Bulk of efforts from EMS Administrators
Clarence Teem
Chuck Baucom
8. Mission Statement, CRTCC To participate in the development of standardized regional trauma care, as well as the establishment and maintenance of a coordinated regional trauma system to promote optimal trauma care for all people within the region.
9. Vision All inclusive system of trauma care throughout the central region of California
Pre-hospital
Destination criteria
Uniform standards of care
Facility
Adequate numbers and quality of trauma centers
Rehabilitation
Education and Prevention
Region-wide performance improvement
10. Accomplishments Bylaws completed and approved
Formal regional response to EMSA draft on Intensive Care Services for the Pediatric Trauma Patient
Gap analysis completed
General Membership meeting held with diverse representation
Subcommittees formed with goals established for each
Presentation to the Hospital Council CEO group
11. Goals Prehospital subcommittee
Standardized triage and destination criteria
Ambulance utilization
Facility subcommittee
Gap analysis
Work with prehospital subcommittee on destination criteria
12. Goals (cont.) Education/Prevention subcommittee
Website
Prevention consortium to look at available resources
PI subcommittee
Peer review
Benchmark data
Quality indicators
To meet Semi-annually/quarterly
13. Challenges We have had GREAT collaboration but we lack Legislative Authority
This is VOLUNTARY buy-in
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Large region, face to face meetings are hard
Teleconferencing
Lack of adequate number of trauma centers and physicians
the San Joaquin Valley has 51% fewer specialists than the rest of the state
14. How we can foster a statewide system Collaboration with other regions
Only region in the state that borders every region
Standardized destination and triage criteria
Transfer agreements and arrangements
Address gaps in trauma care (gap analysis)
Rural trauma course
telemedicine
Participate in statewide trauma registry
15. William Butler Yeats (1919)The Second Coming Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
16. Conclusion Californians deserve and must have an effective state-wide trauma system
This Center will hold
Anarchy in trauma care will NOT be loosed upon the world (or state)