Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Comparative Study
Domestic violence and the trauma surgeon: results of a study on knowledge and education.
Despite the frequency of domestic violence in trauma patients, little emphasis has been placed on this subject in the education of surgeons and emergency medicine physicians. The 1997 Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) course included, for the first time, education about domestic violence. This study was done to test the hypothesis that baseline knowledge about domestic violence in trauma care providers is poor and is not improved by the 1997 ATLS course. ⋯ Baseline knowledge about domestic violence among surgeons and emergency medicine physicians was poor and was not improved by participation in the 1997 ATLS course. This study strongly supports the need for expanded domestic violence education for trauma care providers.
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Most data concerning errors and accidents are from industrial accidents and airline injuries. General Electric, Alcoa, and Motorola, among others, all have reported complex programs that resulted in a marked reduction in frequency of worker injuries. In the field of medicine, however, with the outstanding exception of anesthesiology, there is a paucity of information, most reports referring to the 1984 Harvard-New York State Study, more than 16 years ago. ⋯ Significant system changes will require broad staff participation throughout the hospital. This, in turn, should foster development of an institutional safety culture, rather than the popular attitude that patient safety responsibility is concentrated in the Quality Assurance-Risk Management division. Quality of service and patient safety are closely intertwined.
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Wound infection and sepsis leading to incisional hernia development are common after emergency colonic operations. Later on, while being operated on to correct an incisional hernia, most of these patients will need colonic resection or bowel continuity reestablishment. Simultaneous treatment of incisional hernias in patients with colostomy or colonic disease remains a difficult challenge, considering the reluctance of most surgeons to treat both conditions at the same time, especially when prosthetic repair is needed. ⋯ We concluded that prosthetic repair of incisional hernias associated with simultaneous colonic operations was possible, allowing abdominal wall anatomy reestablishment. There is no reason to believe that abdominal wall prostheses must be avoided in contaminated operations when an adequate surgical technique is used.