In a world-first medical trial, doctors and nurses
will be guided by prompts on a 'superscreen' to help reduce the
number of Victorians dying as a result of trauma.
Health Minister Bronwyn
Pike said the $1.6 million project at the Alfred Hospital was
a 33-month pilot program using Victorian custom-designed software
to guide medical staff during the all-important 30 minutes of
reception and resuscitation.
'We know the first
30 minutes for a trauma patient is the most crucial and this project
will help reduce human error when treating a critically-ill patient.
She emphasised the
system did not replace the expertise of emergency doctors and
nurses.
'But experts believe
there are life-saving benefits in giving the stabilisation process
an added support in what are invariably complex and time-critical
situations.
'In addition, the
system offers a specialist the ability to step into a busy trauma
bay and immediately obtain a snapshot of the patient's situation.
'The Alfred treats
almost half of Victoria's 1,855 major trauma patients a year.
'The Trauma Reception
and Resuscitation Project is just another example of
Victorian public
hospitals offering the absolute best in emergency and trauma care,
treatment and research.'
Alfred Hospital Emergency
and Trauma Centre Director Associate Professor Mark Fitzgerald
said the trial could set a new benchmark for the treatment of
trauma patients around the world.
'At the core of the
system are clinical algorithmswhich are a series of steps
for conducting treatment.
These steps were
developed by more than 30 Alfred medical and nursing staff across
a number of specialisations,' Associate Professor Fitzgerald said.
'Once a trauma patient
has been admitted, the large, 40-inch LCD screen on the wall of
the trauma bay prompts medical staff on the next step of care
needed to stabilise the patient.
'It also displays
patient information such as time of arrival, type of injury and
vital signs.
'There is little
margin for error when treating a trauma patient, so one of the
project's primary aims is to standardise the elements of care
when dealing with a trauma so we can ultimately reduce the likelihood
of error.'
The Victorian Trauma
Foundation (VTF) and Bayside Health have jointly funded the project
with the software developed by Swinburne University.
VTF is a not-for-profit
organisation committed to saving and improving lives through research
and development.
It is mainly funded
through the Transport Accident Commission.