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Emerg Med Australas · Oct 2019
The World Health Organization trauma checklist versus Trauma Team Time-out: A perspective.
- Mark Fitzgerald, Stephanie Reilly, Smit De Villiers V National Trauma Research Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. , Yesul Kim, Joseph Mathew, Ellaine Boo, Abdulrahman Alqahtani, Sharfuddin Chowdhury, Ahamed Darez, Jma Bruno Mascarenhas, Francis O'Keeffe, Michael Noonan, Chris Nickson, Marc Marquez, Wang An Li, Yan Ling Zhang, Kim Williams, and Biswadev Mitra.
- Trauma Services, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
- Emerg Med Australas. 2019 Oct 1; 31 (5): 882-885.
AbstractTime-out protocols have reportedly improved team dynamics and patients' safety in various clinical settings - particularly in the operating room. In 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) introduced a Trauma Care checklist, which outlines steps to follow immediately after the primary and secondary surveys and prior to the team leaving the patient. The WHO Trauma Care checklist's main perceived benefit is the prompting of clinicians to complete trauma admissions as per evidence-based guidelines. The WHO Trauma Care checklist, while likely to be successful in reducing errors of omission related to hospital admission, may be limited in its ability to reduce errors that occur in the initial 30 min of trauma reception - when most of the life-saving decisions are made. To address this limitation a Trauma Team Time-out protocol is proposed for initial trauma resuscitation, targeting the critical first 30 min of hospital reception.© 2019 The Authors. Emergency Medicine Australasia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.
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