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Acute Care Surgery: The Evolution of a Specialty. Amy C. Sisley MD, MPH Banner University Medical Center Phoenix, Arizona. A Brief History …. From Ancient Egypt 5000 Years Old Logical, systematic treatment of traumatic injuries Listed from head to toe.
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Acute Care Surgery:The Evolution of a Specialty Amy C. Sisley MD, MPH Banner University Medical Center Phoenix, Arizona
From Ancient Egypt 5000 Years Old Logical, systematic treatment of traumatic injuries Listed from head to toe The oldest known medical manuscript is a trauma textbook! Edwin Smith Papyrus3000 – 2500 BCE
Lessons Learned in the Past Trends of the Future
The “Golden Hour” ? “If you don’t operate within the first hour, you have probably lost the patient”
Who said that ? R Adams Cowley,M.D. Physician in Chief R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD Coined the phrase “the Golden Hour”
Who said that ? “If you don’t operate within the first hour, you have probably lost the patient” George Goodfellow, M.D. Tombstone, Arizona 1886
A little afternoon get together at the OK Corral in Tombstone, 1881.
Thoracic / Cardiac Pediatric Hand ENT / H&N Vascular Endovascular Colo-Rectal Endocrine MIS Transplant HBS Renal/Pancreas Bariatric Trauma / Critical Care The Sub-specialization of Surgery
Trauma Surgeons The Fighter Pilots Of The Surgical Profession
Trauma Care “We have a quote around here that trauma is for people for whom instant gratification isn’t fast enough. I love not knowing what I’m going to be doing 5 minutes from now” Deborah Stein, M.D. Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD
Modern Day Trauma Textbook Channeling Top Gun ???
Then What Happened? BLUNT TRAUMA • Significant decreases in injury severity Cars better built Highways engineered for safety “Traffic calming” strategies • Improved survival with non-operative management of Liver / spleen injuries J Trauma. 2001 Oct
Then What Happened? PENETRATING TRAUMA • Decreased penetrating violence End of the Crack Cocaine Epidemic • Widespread use of semi-automatic weapons increased on-scene mortality J Trauma. 2001 Oct
Is the Party Over? • This is a far cry from the “golden age of trauma surgery” • … a time when trauma surgeons were considered “master surgeons” who operated on the neck, chest , abdomen, and any injured vessel, and non-operative management was unusual Moore, EE. Trauma Surgery: Is it time for a facelift? Ann Surg. 2004;240:563-564
Challenges:Trauma/Critical Care • Increasingly non-operative: Resuscitation doctors? Babysitters? • Lifestyle Issues Long, unpredictable hours • Poor Reimbursement Uninsured and underinsured • Patient population (intoxicated, drug altered, violent)
Challenges:Trauma/Critical Care • Increasingly non-operative: Resuscitation doctors? Babysitters? • Lifestyle Issues Long, unpredictable hours • Poor Reimbursement Uninsured and underinsured • Patient population (intoxicated, drug altered, violent)
Resident Experience on Trauma: Declining Surgical Opportunities and Career Incentives? • 82 Trauma Centers • 2 year period • 247,00 Trauma admissions • Majority of trauma centers (65.9%) had >80% blunt trauma Fakhry S et. al. J Trauma 2003;54-1-8
Resident Experience on Trauma: Declining Surgical Opportunities and Career Incentives? Fakhry S et. al. J Trauma 2003;54-1-8
Gun Shot Wounds • Increased use of semi-automatic and automatic weapons • Increased on-scene mortality • Increased ED mortality • Fewer operations Carr BG et.al., 2008
Resident Experience on Trauma: Declining Surgical Opportunities and Career Incentives? Fakhry S et. al. J Trauma 2003;54-1-8
Resident Experience on Trauma: Declining Surgical Opportunities and Career Incentives? • Assuming 1 night in 4 on call • Potential participation in one year: • 15 trauma laparotomies • 6 DPLs • 45 Ultrasound examinations • Each resident will care for an average of 500 blunt trauma patients before performing a splenectomy or liver repair Fakhry S et. al. J Trauma 2003;54-1-8
Declining “Juice to Squeeze” Ratio Declining Interest In Trauma/Critical Care Amongst Surgical Residents
Challenges:Trauma/Critical Care • Increasingly non-operative: Resuscitation doctors? Babysitters? • Lifestyle Issues Long, unpredictable hours • Poor Reimbursement Uninsured and underinsured • Patient population (intoxicated, drug altered, violent)
Lifestyle Issues • Need to provide coverage 24-7-365 • Little attention and no regulation to attending hours • Significant deterrent to trainees • Recommendation of AAST is to adopt shiftwork. Where’s the $$$$?
Trauma Surgery • The American Board of Surgery (ABS) does NOT recognize trauma surgery as a specialty • The ABS DOES recognize the (completely non-operative) field of Surgical Critical Care (SCC) as a subspecialty certification. Odd • There is no ACGME approved trauma fellowship training program • Trauma has no unified “voice”
Challenges:Trauma/Critical Care • Increasingly non-operative: Resuscitation doctors? Babysitters? • Lifestyle Issues Long, unpredictable hours • Poor Reimbursement Uninsured and underinsured • Patient population (intoxicated, drug altered, violent)
Poor payer mix EMTALA and Ethics Lack of ABS recognition or Trauma Surgery = no Trauma “voice” in CPT or RVU discussions Reimbursement Issues
Challenges:Trauma/Critical Care • Increasingly non-operative: Resuscitation doctors? Babysitters? • Lifestyle Issues Long, unpredictable hours • Poor Reimbursement Uninsured and underinsured • Patient population (intoxicated, drug altered, violent)
Intoxicated 73% with BAL> 0.8 Drug Altered 43% with + tox screen High risk of HIV, Hepatitis, other blood borne illnesses Violent? Perception of Trauma Patients Soderstrom C, et al. J Trauma
Perception of Trauma Surgeons Trauma Surgeons are the Lifeguards at the Shallow End of the Gene Pool Rick Dutton, MD, Anesthesiologist
379 responses • Average age 49 • Male 88% • Critical Care Fellowship 73% • Time in Practice – average 15 years
Percentage of Respondents Answering: Agree/Strongly Agree Satisfied with Career Choice – 90% Trauma Surgeons are Undervalued by Society – 88% Trauma Surgery is a viable/sustainable practice – 35% Trauma Surgery can be designed to be viable/sustainable – 83%
Critical Care Workforce Shortage Currently 18 million ICU Days per year Exponential increase expected due to aging population Predicted : 35% shortage of intensivists by 2020 Health Resources and Service Administration report to Congress (Senate Report 108-81), January, 2009
Critical Care Fellowship Positions Filled: 2001 - 2009
Unmatched Critical Care Training Positions 2006-2010 Napolitano, et al. J Trauma, 2010
ED – full Increased ED wait times Lack of Hospital Beds Lack of Surgical Coverage Plastics, ENT, Neurosurgery, Hand, OB-GYN, General Surgery, Ophthalmology Trauma & Emergency Care
Why surgeons do not want to cover the ED • Increased liability • Poor reimbursement • Lack of hospital support • Lack of support from surgical subspecialties • Wreaks havoc on elective schedule
The Paradigm Shift: Acute Care Surgery: Trauma Surgical Critical Care Emergency General Surgery +/- Burn
Acute Care Surgery service: Combining Trauma and Emergency General Surgery • Operative volume comparable to GI/MIS • May actually underestimate trauma component of operative volume • Case variety excellent