Major trauma care gap means patients die ‘unnecessarily’
Up to five seriously injured patients in south Wales die unnecessarily each month because the region is not part of a major trauma network, an expert in emergency care has said.
Prof David Lockey said a lack of specialist treatment meant lives were “being lost all the time”.
Plans to establish a major trauma network for the region have been put to public consultation.
South Wales is the only region in England and Wales not in a network.
Both Swansea’s Morriston Hospital and Cardiff’s University Hospital of Wales had bid to become Wales’ first major trauma centre (MTC).
In June, a panel of independent experts concluded Cardiff was the preferred option as it is Wales’ only specialist neurosurgery hospital and home of Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospital of Wales.
The panel recommended Morriston Hospital should be a major trauma unit as part of the wider network.
- Cardiff recommended as major trauma centre
- How Bristol’s major trauma centre works
- I lost seven weeks after near-fatal crash
Experts from Morriston Hospital had argued it was better located to become an MTC – with a greater proportion of the south Wales population living within an hour’s travelling time.
Morriston also has a well-established burns and plastics surgery unit – which serves Wales and south west England.
What is a Major Trauma Centre?
- A designated, specialist hospital responsible for the care of the most severely injured patients
- Experts in a wide range of injuries are available 24/7
- If it is safe to do so, critical cases are usually taken there directly instead of to the nearest A&E
- Major trauma cases are relatively rare but getting the right care quickly can make a huge difference to survival chances
- The first was established in London in 2010; four are planned in Scotland
- MTCs work within a network of other hospitals – designated major trauma units (MTUs)
Patients in north Wales, and much of mid Wales are already part of the West Midlands major trauma network – since 2012 people from these areas with life-threatening injuries have been routinely transferred to the MTC at the Royal Stoke Hospital.
Among those to have benefited from that arrangement is Megan Jones, who nearly died after a road crash in Gwynedd five years ago, when she was 17.
“Being in a major trauma centre and having the expertise in the various injuries I had was the key to giving me the correct and highest standard of treatment for my recovery,” she said.
Prof Lockey has been running the Severn Trauma Network based around the MTC in Bristol for the past five to six years and is heading up clinical efforts to establish a major trauma network in Wales.
He said: “If one of your family or friends has a major trauma your chances of surviving are much higher and that is my priority. The details are slightly less relevant.
“Lives are being lost all the time.
“We’re looking at a 25% to 30% reduction in mortality [since major trauma networks were established[ in England – that’s around 600 lives a year.
“If you scale that down to a population of 2.3 million that we’re talking about in south Wales we’re talking about 45-60 lives a year.
“So every month we don’t put a trauma network in we’re losing 4-5 lives unnecessarily.”
He said south Wales could learn lessons from already established networks and become “a leading light” in the area.
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