Clinical Case Database / Category: Clinical Care

The management of major trauma

Publication details

John Hambridge FRCSEd (Orth)
Foundation Years Journal, volume 1, issue 6, p.6 (123Doc Education, London, October 2007)

Abstract

Major trauma is the leading cause of death in those aged under 40. There are three times as many left permanently handicapped. For each individual trainee their exposure to major trauma is limited. The patients condition rapidly changes, large amounts of information need to be processed, involvement in a multidisciplinary team both medical and none medical contribute to the fears of the young doctor presented with the unknown. There may be more than one patient; those involved may have non-survivable injuries. The reality of a major trauma case is very different from that portrayed in Holby City or ER.

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Authors

John Hambridge FRCSEd (Orth) (Corresponding author)

Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon
King’s Mill Hospital
Mansfield Road
Sutton in Ashfield
Notts
NG17 4JL

References

0.  Advanced Trauma Life Support for Doctors. Student course manual 7th ed. Chicago, American College of Surgeons 2004.

Disclaimers

Conflict Of Interest

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Financial Statement

The authors of this article have not been paid. The Journal is financed by subscriptions and advertising. The Journal does not receive money from any other sources. The decision to accept or refuse this article for publication was free from financial considerations and was solely the responsibility of the Editorial Panel and Editor-in-Chief.

Patient Consent statement

All pictures and investigations shown in this article are shown with the patients’ consent. We require Authors to maintain patients’ anonymity and to obtain consent to report investigations and pictures involving human subjects when anonymity may be compromised. The Journal follows the Guidelines of the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts (http://www.icmje.org/urm_full.pdf). The Journal requires in its Guidelines for Authors a statement from Authors that “the subject gave informed consent”.

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When reporting experiments on human subjects, the Journal requires authors to indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national) and with the HelsinkiDeclaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

About the Clinical Cases Database

T​he Foundation Years Clinical Cases Database is​ a selection of 600 peer-reviewed clinical cases in the field of patient safety and clinical practice, specifically focused on the clinical information needs of junior doctors, based around the Foundation Year Curriculum programme (MMC). The cases have been chosen to align with the Foundation Year Curriculum.

The database is fully searchable, or can be browsed by medical specialty. Abstracts can be read free of charge, however a subscription is required in order to read the complete cases.