Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6083590 | Injury | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Our trauma programme recently had the opportunity to conceive, design, build, and operationalise a purpose-designed hybrid trauma operating room, designated as the resuscitation with angiographic percutaneous techniques and operative resuscitation (RAPTOR) suite, which we believe to be the first such resource designed primarily to serve the exsanguinating trauma patient. The project was initiated after consultations between the trauma programme and private philanthropists regarding the greatest potential impacts on regional trauma care. The initial capital construction costs were thus privately generated but coincided with a new hospital wing construction allowing the RAPTOR to be purpose-designed for the exsanguinating patient. Many trauma programmes around the world are now starting to navigate the complex process of building new facilities, or else retrofitting existing ones, to address the need for single-site flexible haemorrhage control. This manuscript therefore describes the many considerations in the design and refinement of the physical build, equipment selection, human factors evaluation of new combined treatment paradigms, and the final introduction of a RAPTOR protocol in order that others may learn from our initial efforts.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Emergency Medicine
Authors
Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Christine Vis, Mirette Dubé, Susan Biesbroek, Chad G. Ball, Jason Laberge, Jonas Shultz, Ken Rea, David Sadler, John B. Holcomb, John Kortbeek,