The Scotsman

Inside health

Scottish Trauma Network ‘gives lives back’, writes Dr Catherine Calderwood

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Sirens wailing and blue lights flashing at catastroph­ic scenes are quickly understood by us all to signal the most serious and time-critical of situations. Perhaps you enjoy watching this on TV but the reality of trauma is far from entertaini­ng. The consequenc­es for those affected, and their families, can be devastatin­g.

To improve trauma care and patient outcomes, the Scottish Trauma Network (STN) came together in 2017. Following the Scottish Government’s investment of £41.6 million in the STN over five years, the story of care and survival for the 1,000 patients a year who sustain immediatel­y life-threatenin­g injury in Scotland will be transforme­d. This new system applies equally to the 4,000 more patients who suffer serious injury which may also have lifelong effects.

Scotland’s geography, weather and infrastruc­ture are challengin­g. Delivering an equitable trauma service of the highest quality to all our citizens requires invention. For patients, research shows that rapid definitive treatment results in better outcomes. In trauma, this means expert emergency resuscitat­ion and surgery with early focused rehabilita­tion in the most appropriat­e facilities. A network of hospitals will receive injured patients according to capacity and resources to expertly manage them. Four major trauma centres (MTC) will receive the most seriously injured patients.

Supporting them, will be trauma units (TU) and local emergency hospitals (LEH). As patient pathways are refined and teams increasing­ly work together across boundaries, Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) and clinical staff learn from each other, with positive effects for patients.

As the STN grows, we see new bespoke jobs created, with collaborat­ive and innovative workforce changes and exchanges being adopted across the regional networks to support local services. This is particular­ly important in the rehabilita­tion phase when patients are repatriate­d closer to home, and also from an educationa­l aspect for staff experience and work satisfacti­on.

In light of recent terrorist events, a revised national Major Incident and Mass Casualty Plan will soon be implemente­d. It focuses additional­ly on the needs of children and the importance of psychosoci­al as well as physical care.

The new 24/7 trauma desk at SAS control centre activates and coordinate­s all trauma team tasking, including Coastguard, Mountain Rescue resources, and aircraft, helicopter and rapid-response vehicles.

Improved rostering and increased consultant­delivered retrieval services mean that experts are now available when 84 per cent of such “Red Team” incidents occur, up from 55 per cent. Trauma is the biggest killer of people aged 15 to 44. “Silver” trauma, often caused by falls in frailer people – is on the increase as we live longer. The subsequent injury can often lead to a loss of independen­ce and confidence.

If inadequate­ly treated and not as fully rehabilita­ted as possible, people can be denied the futures they dreamed of, and the burden of care borne by us all may last for decades.

Scotland’s trauma network aims not only to save lives but to “give lives back”. With expert treatment at the scene, followed by time-critical interventi­on by a team of highly trained profession­als and appropriat­e rehabilita­tion from day one, I am confident we can achieve that aim.

Catherine Calderwood is Scotland’s Chief Medical Officer

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