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Mission:

To establish and promote a system of emergency medical and trauma care services. Such a system provides timely and appropriate delivery of emergency medical treatment for people with acute illness and traumatic injury, and recognizes the changing methods and environment for providing optimal emergency care throughout the state of Washington.


History and Background:

Trauma is a disease of epidemic proportions. Each year, over 140,000 American's lives are ended - suddenly, unexpectedly, brutally - by this killer. It has been aptly called the last major plague of the young, for trauma kills more Americans between the ages of one and thirty-four than all other diseases combined. But trauma is more than a plague of the young: Trauma is the leading cause of death for all people under age forty-four, and the leading cause of disability for all people under age sixty-five.

While health and illness care, in general, have made extraordinary advances during the last forty years, the battle to abate the trauma epidemic has seen only limited success. Three major factors account for this.

First, the medical specialty of emergency medicine and trauma care is relatively new. The concept of early field intervention and immediate transport to an acute care center with highly skilled health care professionals prepared to provide early, definitive care was only recently developed, a by-product of the Vietnam conflict. Moreover, medical care is limited: Regardless of advances in technology and techniques, a surgeon can only do so much to save a child with a flail chest, a mother with a crushed spine, a teen struck in a drive-by shooting.

Second, injury prevention, a powerful weapon in the fight against trauma, suffers from a lack of drama and immediacy. Too often the blaring sirens and flashing lights of the emergent, acute care component of trauma overshadow the seemingly mundane arena of prevention. Too often cavalier, fatalistic attitudes that "accidents" are "inevitable" justify inaction and create a cycle that feeds upon itself. Yet, from changes in product safety to changes in personal behavior, prevention is clearly one of the most effective and least costly means for reducing the occurrence of trauma.

And third, the development of a trauma care system - a system which assures that the required resources are available and the necessary infrastructure is in place to deliver the "right" patient to the "right" facility in the "right" amount of time - entails broad consensus and cooperation among divergent groups and around complex logistical, political, financial, legal and medical issues. In some states, attempts to develop such a system have succeeded; in others they have failed.

Yet, given the nature of the disease, a comprehensive trauma care system which includes a strong injury prevention component holds the most promise for curbing this brutal epidemic. Thirty to forty percent of all trauma deaths occur within hours of the injury, usually from shock and/or internal bleeding. Virtually all of these deaths are considered inappropriate and preventable, and would not occur if an organized trauma system were in place. Moreover, all trauma deaths, and particularly those which occur within minutes of injury and for which there are no effective medical treatments, could be avoided through appropriate injury prevention actions.

Washington State is continuing its tradition of being in the forefront in confronting this epidemic. In 1990, far-reaching legislation was adopted which called for the development of a comprehensive statewide trauma care system. This legislation was the culmination of a series of initiatives which began in the late 1960's with the University of Washington pioneering the development of paramedic training programs; continued through the 1970's with the establishment of legislatively-mandated minimum standards for prehospital providers and services, and certification for paramedics and other advance life support personnel; and concluded in the late 1980's with the completion of the "Washington State Trauma Patient Tracking Study," and the development of the 1990 Washington State Trauma Project: A Report to the State Legislature.

The key components of this 1990 legislation, the Trauma Care Systems Act, include:

· Clear lines of authority and responsibility;
· Designation of services;
· Trauma Care services;
· Verification of Prehospital Trauma services;
· Field triage criteria development;
· Regional planning and implementation;
· Cost containment considerations;
· Integration of trauma/injury prevention;
· Trauma registry development;
· Establishment of regional quality assurance/improvement programs;
· Integration of trauma rehabilitation services; and,
· Evaluation of system effectiveness.

In addition, particular attention is being focused on the needs of rural and American Indian communities; on integrating the continuum of care from prevention and first responder agencies to the acute care treatment centers and through rehabilitation services; and on empowering the regions within the state to identify and address the unique needs, circumstances and conditions they each must face.

The closures of trauma centers in California and Florida have attracted much national attention. In part, these closures reflect a necessary evolution and refinement of the trauma systems in those states. More significantly, however, they demonstrate the necessity for careful consideration of the economic consequences of trauma care and trauma system development. The fundamental prerequisite for the development of a successful trauma care system is our society's resolve to commit the resources required to get the job done.

The integration of the trauma system with the existing EMS system is being implemented; community-based prevention projects have been implemented statewide; the initial designation of trauma care facilities is completed with geographic coverage statewide; the implementation of the statewide trauma registry is well underway, and regional quarterly assurance/improvement programs are being initiated. Stable and continuous funding is vital to this crucial phase of system development.

The horror of trauma is not in the mangled heap of twisted steel and blood; it is in the eyes of a mother and father who have just lost their child. And the crime of trauma is not just perpetrated by gang members or drunken drivers; it is also perpetrated by a society that would knowingly deny and neglect this cruel epidemic.


State Authority and Responsibilities

Trauma - the leading cause of death for all people under age forty-four and the leading cause of disability for all people under age sixty-five - is a disease of epidemic proportions. Yet, between thirty and forty percent of trauma deaths would not occur if an organized trauma system were in place. Washington State has developed and is implementing such a system.

The Washington Emergency Medical Services and Trauma Act of 1990 declared that a trauma care system, one which delivers the "right" patient to the "right" facility in the "right" amount of time, would be cost effective, assure appropriate and adequate care, prevent human suffering, and reduce the personal and societal burden resulting from trauma. In addition, the statute acknowledged prevention as a powerful weapon in the fight against trauma, and called for the integration of injury prevention programs in the development of the trauma system.

The statute also called for a biennial plan to be made available to assure the orderly and systematic implementation of the trauma system. This document - the 2nd biennial plan - provides the vision, goals and key components fundamental to a trauma system and, together with each region's plans, outlines the specific actions needed to implement and improve the statewide trauma care system.

Finally, in fulfilling the mandates of this legislation, four major groups of participants have been assembled: The Department of Health's Office of Emergency Medical Services and Trauma System, the Governor's Steering Committee on EMS and Trauma Systems Development, the EMS Licensing and Certification Committee, and the EMS and Trauma System Regions.


Section Information:

The Office of Emergency Medical Services and Trauma System consists of four sections:
These sections provide leadership, direction, technical support, system assessment and regulatory control.

  Education, Training and Regional Support
  Licensing and Certification
  Prevention, Policy and Trauma Fund
  Trauma Designation, Registry and Quality Assurance
 

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Office of Emergency Medical Services and Trauma System
P.O. Box 47853,
Olympia, Washington, 98504-7853
Phone: (360) 236-2828
(Fax: 360) 236-2829 or 236-2830

Last Update : 03/28/2006 08:37 AM
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