Critical care medicine
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The origins of trauma systems in the United States date to the 1960s when physicians returning from wars abroad realized that lessons learned from managing military casualties could be applied to civilian traumatic injury. Over the next several decades, trauma centers and then trauma systems began to be developed in an attempt to improve prehospital and acute care for these patients. Although studies of trauma system effectiveness are fraught with methodologic difficulties, several types of studies (panel reviews of preventable deaths, registry studies, and population-based studies), suggest that there may be improvements in mortality when trauma systems are established. ⋯ Pediatric trauma systems have by necessity developed within the "adult" systems in place. The history of pediatric system development and studies assessing outcomes are also discussed. Continued system development, assessment, and educational efforts about how childhood injuries are different are essential to combat this leading killer of children.
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Trauma is the leading cause of both morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population, and traumatic injury causes > 50% of all childhood deaths. Significant mortality rates have been reported for children with traumatic brain injury. ⋯ The costs involved in the care of a child with severe traumatic brain injury, extended over that child's lifetime, are significant. It is unfortunate that despite preventive measures, traumatic brain injury remains the major morbidity and mortality factor for children.
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Critically ill and injured children due to abusive or inflicted injury represent a growing challenge for pediatric intensive care unit personnel in terms of the number of patients seen each year in the United States and the intellectual and emotional response required to deal with this tragic problem. We present a distillation of the current knowledge of childhood physical abuse with a focus on the child with inflicted injury who is admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit. In addition to a discussion of the epidemiology, clinical presentation, an approach to diagnosis, and treatment strategies, we also explore the legal issues that confront pediatric intensive care unit physicians in relation to determination of brain death, suitability of victims for organ donation, and the physician's role in the criminal investigation of child abuse and as a witness for court proceedings.
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Critical care medicine · Nov 2002
ReviewPediatric trauma: postinjury care in the pediatric intensive care unit.
Traumatic injuries occur in > 20 million children each year and are the leading source of death in children over the age of 1 yr. Mechanisms of injury and subsequent therapies for critically injured children are diverse. This review will focus on resources and management strategies for caring for the severely injured child in the pediatric intensive care unit.
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Multiple trauma is more than the sum of the injuries. Management not only of the physiologic injury but also of the pathophysiologic responses, along with integration of the child's emotional and developmental needs and the child's family, forms the basis of trauma care. Multiple trauma in children also elicits profound psychological responses from the healthcare providers involved with these children. ⋯ The selection of children for damage control surgery depends on the severity of injury. Major abdominal vascular injuries and multiple visceral injuries are best considered for this approach. The effective management of childhood multiple trauma requires a combined team approach, consideration of the child and family, an organized trauma system, and an effective quality assurance and improvement mechanism.