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HRSA Model Trauma Systems Planning

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Access to a well-established health system infrastructure ... Improve dialogue between trauma/EMS professionals, public health professionals & policy-makers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HRSA Model Trauma Systems Planning


1
HRSA Model Trauma Systems Planning Evaluation
  • July 24, 2008
  • Gail Cooper

2
Common Names
  • HRSA Model Trauma Systems Planning Evaluation
    (MTSPE)
  • Model Trauma Plan
  • National Trauma Plan

3
HRSA Model Trauma Plan
  • Do you fit?
  • Sure, with a little tweaking here there all
    States fit one way or another
  • Its not a prescriptive document, it is a guide!

4
HRSA Model Trauma Plan
  • How does California fit?
  • By identifying resources already at work in
    California to reduce trauma death disability
    (Assessment)
  • Working to close the gaps in service delivery
    (Policy Development)
  • Measuring results, morbidity mortality
    (Assurance)

5
HRSA Model Trauma Plan
  • What does it mean?
  • Change Toward more universal statewide coverage

6
Looking Back The Need for Change
  • New Plan/New Model
  • Move away from components
  • Toward inclusive, integrated, evidence based
  • Develop Trauma System Planning and Evaluation A
    Public Health Approach
  • Planning Guide
  • Integrates essential elements of the model trauma
    system plan using a public health approach
  • Incorporates new information on Systems
    Development
  • Self-evaluation document
  • BIS (Benchmarks, Indicators, Scoring)

7
Process for Future TraumaSystem Development
  • Funded by HRSA
  • Use the village approach
  • Solicit comments frequently
  • Incorporate ideas from key trauma leaders
  • Build consensus among stakeholders
  • Repeatedly educate stakeholders about the public
    health approach to trauma care

8
Why Public Health
  • Gives credibility to trauma as a public health
    problem
  • Reasonable, methodical approach recommended by
    the IOM
  • Grounds trauma in a theoretical base
  • Incorporates trauma injury within the framework
    of public health
  • Allows trauma to be more competitive for funding

9
The Process
  • Review
  • 1992 Draft Model Trauma Care System Plan
  • Trauma System Agenda for the Future
  • HRSA Evaluation instrument
  • ACS/COT Trauma system consultation manual
  • Literature review
  • Skamania conference
  • Literature since Skamania conference

10
Leaders Task Groups
  • Key Framers of New Document
  • Use ACS/COT as entity to produce new document
  • The Village people
  • ACEP
  • STN
  • NASEMSP
  • NASEMSO
  • HRSA
  • ACS/COT
  • CDC
  • NHTSA

11
Trauma System Planning Evaluation A Public
Health Approach
  • the public health approach is simply a proven,
    systematic method of problem identification
    problem solving it provides a conceptual
    framework for trauma system development,
    management ongoing performance improvement

Draft, DHHS/HRSA, Feb 2003, p. 5
12
Trauma System Planning Evaluation Guide
  • Fresh approach to trauma system planning
  • Focus around 3 Core Functions of Public Health
    (A, PD, A)
  • Use Trauma Agenda for the Future components
    (NHTSA)
  • Provide practical information
  • Include updated version of HRSA Trauma System
    evaluation tool (BIS self evaluation)
  • Incorporate NACCHO Standards for Public Health
    Offices where applicable

13
Public Health Goals
  • Prevent epidemics spread of disease
  • Protect against environmental hazards
  • Prevent Injuries
  • Promote and encourage healthy behaviors
  • Respond to disasters assist communities in
    recovery
  • Assure the quality accessibility of Health
    Services

14
Mission of Public Health
  • Assuring conditions in which people can be
    healthy
  • Substance of Public Health Organized community
    efforts aimed at the prevention of disease the
    promotion of health

IOM, 1988
15
Trauma System Goals
  • Decrease the incidence and severity of trauma
  • Ensure optimal, equitable accessible care for
    all persons sustaining trauma
  • Prevent unnecessary deaths disabilities from
    trauma
  • Contain costs while enhancing efficiency
  • Implement quality performance improvement of
    trauma care through out the system
  • Ensure certain designated facilities have
    appropriate resources to meet the needs of the
    injured

16
Mission of the Trauma System
  • Prevent injuries while ensuring that the right
    patient gets to the right hospital in the right
    amount of time

17
Benefits to the Trauma System
  • Access to a well-established accepted
    conceptual model for health care system
    assessment, planning, intervention, evaluation.
  • Potential communications infrastructure
    (notification systems)
  • Access to all-hazards information
  • Population-based data
  • Resources for disaster preparedness
  • Opportunity to integrate the trauma system into
    other community health efforts to promote overall
    health
  • A more precise identification of populations at
    risk a targeting of specific issues based on
    these data
  • Framework for injury prevention strategies

18
Benefits to the Public Health System
  • Access to all-hazards information
  • Access to a well-established health system
    infrastructure
  • Health system response that differentiates
    facilities by level of resource availability
  • Existing protocols and guidelines for the care
    process
  • Access to patient outcome data
  • Existing performance improvement process
  • Additional resources for injury prevention
    efforts
  • Resources to provide all-hazards care
  • Recognition that injury continues to be a public
    health problem despite significant efforts at
    trauma system development

19
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20
Why a public health approach?
  • Assure consistency with the Trauma System Agenda
    for the Future
  • Begin looking at outcomes rather than just the
    structure process
  • Give credibility to trauma as a public health
    problem
  • Improve dialogue between trauma/EMS
    professionals, public health professionals
    policy-makers

21
Why a public health approach ?
  • Reasonable, methodical approach recommended by
    the Institute of Medicine
  • Enhance integration of trauma systems into public
    health disaster planning bioterrorism response
    planning
  • Allow trauma EMS to be more competitive for
    funding
  • Grounds trauma system in theoretical base
  • Incorporates both EMS trauma within a public
    health system

22
Supporting the Model
  • Recent IOM report on the Future of Emergency
    Medical Services
  • ACS/COT Systems Consultation Guide
  • Regional Trauma Systems Optimal Elements,
    Integration, Assessment
  • Key Trauma System Leadership, National, State
    Local

23
Vision for the Future of Emergency Care
  • Emergency Care System
  • Coordinated,
  • Regionalized,
  • Accountable

IOM, 2005
24
Key Problems
  • Fragmentation
  • Lack of coordination between local service
    providers between EMS and public safety
    between EMS air medical services
  • Uncertain Quality
  • Little or no performance data lack of national
    standards for training credentialing.
  • Disaster Preparedness
  • Inadequate training, equipment, funding.
  • Evidence Base
  • limited understanding of effectiveness

25
Key Recommendations
  • Communications
  • Improve data communications systems
    interoperability between EMS agencies, hospitals,
    public health departments.
  • State regulation of air medical providers with
    respect to communications, dispatch, transport
    protocols.

26
Workforce Standards
  • Improve the quality consistency of EMS by
    encouraging states to
  • Require national accreditation of paramedic
    education programs.
  • Accept national certification as a prerequisite
    for state licensure.
  • Establish a common scope of practice for EMS
    personnel across states, with state licensing
    reciprocity.

27
Research
  • Study to examine the gaps in emergency and trauma
    care research.
  • Development of a research strategy.
  • Increased funding for prehospital EMS research,
    emphasizing systems outcomes research.

28
Disaster Preparedness
  • Elevation of emergency care to a position of
    parity with other public safety entities in
    disaster planning operations.
  • Increase in funding for EMS-related disaster
    preparedness through dedicated funding streams.
  • Incorporate disaster preparedness training into
    EMS professional training continuing education.

29
CA Model Trauma System
  • The HRSA Model Trauma System Planning and
    Evaluation (MTSPE) document provides a guide for
    states in enhancing trauma care.
  • The guide provides a structure for further
    developing the statewide system
  • MTSPE guide is one tool for states to use in
    developing an inclusive trauma system
  • ACS/COT Systems Consultation guide
  • Public Health and Trauma System both focus on
    risk reduction
  • Trauma continues to be a leading cause of death
    in California

30
Conclusion Californias Direction
  • Use the MTSPE guide to evolve a statewide system
  • Continue developing the regional approach to
    trauma care within California using the BIS as a
    guide to improvement
  • Rely on data to assist in setting standards,
    guidelines and benchmarks that may be unique to
    California
  • Incorporate the COT Systems Consultation Guide
    (Regional Trauma Systems Optimal Elements,
    Integration, and Assessment)

31
Conclusion Californias Direction
  • Leadership in Trauma Systems
  • State, Regional, Local,
  • Many Benchmarks Indicators already achieved
  • Statutes, Regulations, Funding available
  • It will never be enough!
  • The timing is right to move California to the
    next level of trauma system development

32
JUST DO IT
  • Build on the synergy cooperative spirit of this
    summit
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