The
Trauma Care 2017 conference (@TraumaCareUK) was held at Staffordshire’s
Yarnfield Park 15-18 March.
In
total, there were over 26 conference streams and an incredible 200 speakers!
Hundreds, if not thousands, of delegates included pre-hospital and in-hospital
clinicians, fire and rescue personnel, military, and police officers plus an
enormous number of volunteers who represented groups such as community first
responder and search and rescue organisations from across the UK.
Yarnfield
Park (@YarnfieldPark1) itself developed from housing used by temporary workers
at a nearby world war two munitions factory. Today, the site is a cross between
a small university campus, a Travelodge and an outdoor activity centre.
I
arrived at 3pm on the third day (17 March). Checking into the accommodation was
easy, and I found myself in a small but modern room in the Derwent block. Free
WiFi, available across the site, was excellent and it was simple to find my way
around the conference centre.
I
caught Karim Brohi’s (@KarimBrohi) keynote presentation about trauma induced
coagulopathy; particularly interesting points included the realisation many
blood products used in emergency medicine are optimised and packaged for the
longest possible shelf life, rather than ideal contents and volumes for trauma
management. Perhaps there’s a future for special blood banks with tailor made
solutions to these issues.
The
evening meal was in a modern canteen setting; the £5.99 meal was fairly simple
chicken and roast vegetables. The bar was fairly quiet and served until
11.30pm, giving time for plenty of chatter between delegates, Trauma Care
faculty and some of the commercial exhibitors. I made it to bed around 1am. At
first the bed felt quite firm, but I slept through the night and woke up
refreshed the next morning.
The
fried breakfast was very good value, which set me up for the day. I was
speaking at the Student Paramedic conference so went to the room and got ready.
Around 60 student paramedics from across England attended, and the day was
organised and facilitated by Andy Thomas (@AndyThomas135).
The
first speaker was Paul Gowens (@SASConsultPara), Lead Consultant Paramedic with
the Scottish Ambulance Service, who spoke about management of traumatic cardiac
arrest. Paul impressed how important it is for a lone responder to
consider straightening grossly deformed legs, applying a pelvic splint,
obtaining vascular access and give fluids, decompressing the chest and securing
the airway before commencing chest compressions. Where two clinicians are
available, these should happen simultaneously.
7.5%
of patients do survive a traumatic cardiac arrest, which compares favourably to
medical arrests, so it’s worthwhile attempting resuscitation in this group.
My
session followed. I spoke about changes in paramedic trauma care 2006-present,
and speculating what paramedic trauma care might look like in 2026. I got some
great feedback from Twitter and feel genuinely humbled by some of the
compliments I received.
Richard
Steyn, cardiothoracic surgeon, led a talk on chest injuries, explaining
different factors can be associated with the pathology of pneumothorax and
reminding the audience bilateral crushing forces can produce flail chest
injures which affect the entire ribcage but also be difficult to
easily identify.
I
next toured the 20-30 exhibitor stands; the British Army were showcasing
opportunities for health professionals, TraumaFX (@TraumaFXUK) demonstrated
their lifelike mannequins and explained just how durable they are whilst
amenable to intense training scenarios, and even a dog first aid instructor was
explaining how to care for animals used in search and rescue!
Martin
Berry (@MartinBerryUK) spoke about the College of Paramedics’ (@ParamedicsUK)
post-graduate framework, and potential opportunities for specialised, advanced
and consultant paramedics both in terms of trauma and the wider profession.
There were some really exciting ideas and a welcome reminder that supporting
the College of Paramedics is the most effective way to support our professional
development and secure a bright future.
Officers
from Durham and Cleveland police (@TTCUrlayNook) spoke about firearms
units responding to a Marauding Terrorist Firearms Attack (MFTA) and reviewed
the trauma interventions which can be offered by skilled police officers at the
scene of deliberate violence, but also at road traffic accidents in support of
the ambulance service.
The
closing session was hosted by Andy Thomas, and I, Martin Berry and Paul Elliott
(@PaulElliott_) fielded a range of questions about management of hypothermia,
whether the HCPC, or another body, should maintain a register of paramedics in
advanced roles and what the future holds for paramedic education.
Just
before 5pm, the conference closed and delegates made their way home, taking new
knowledge and experience back to their daily practice and training. With such
high quality teaching underpinning the entire event, it’s certain that injured
patients will have already benefitted from Trauma Care 2017.
March 2017
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