Trauma medicine
In medicine, the area of trauma medicine practice principally is concerned with severe multisystem physical injury that can progress into irreversible shock. It encompasses both trauma surgery and trauma critical care. Victims of physical trauma may indeed suffer trauma (psychological), both acute and delayed-onset, but that is not the focus of this article.
The background of physicians who treat trauma varies by countries. In the United States, while it is not a specialty board, many of the leading practitioners are general surgeons who have had fellowship training in trauma. In other countries, it may be considered a collateral duty of general or orthopedic surgeons. Emergency physicians, obviously, are often the initial managers of the trauma patient.
Policy, legal and ethical challenges
While their principal responsibility is treatment, trauma specialists are very aware of the potentially preventable causes of trauma and may become involved in education. They also may be key advisers to field medicine on the prehospital care of the trauma patient.
Trauma physicians often see victims of accidents or violence, who are otherwise in good physical condition but have injuries incompatible with life. As such, they are potential organ or tissue donors, and obtaining consent is often stressful for all involved. [1]
References
- ↑ {{citation | title = Determinants of Family Consent to Tissue Donation (Abstract) | author = Siminoff, Laura A.; Traino, Heather M.; Gordon, Nahida | journal = Journal of Trauma (online pre-publication) | date=3 June 2010 | doi = 10.1097/TA.0b013e3181d8924b | url = http://journals.lww.com/jtrauma/Abstract/publishahead/Determinants_of_Family_Consent_to_Tissue_Donation.99527.aspx}