J Trauma Acute Care Surg
August 2024
Introduction: Compassion fatigue (CF), the physical, emotional, and psychological impact of helping others, is composed of three domains: compassion satisfaction (CS), secondary traumatic stress (STS), and burnout (BO). Trauma surgeons (TSs) experience work-related stress resulting in high rates of CF, which can manifest as physical and psychological disorders. We hypothesized that TSs experience CF and there are potentially modifiable systemic factors to mitigate its symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis chapter summarizes approaches to hemorrhage control in penetrating cardiac trauma, an injury that is a true test of trauma systems integration, trauma center readiness, teamwork, decision-making, technical excellence, and multidisciplinary trauma care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThoracic injuries are common and occur in combination with other injuries in various compartments representing a significant pattern of injury in any trauma center. Injured patients presenting with exsanguinating hemorrhage from the thoracic cavity are an acute subset of patients that can be extremely challenging to any trauma surgeon as the immediate need to diagnose and intervene is critical. Diagnosis is based on traumatic history pattern and hemodynamics, assisted with plain films, ultra-sound and properly placed chest tubes.
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