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State Designation of Level III and IV 
Trauma Care Facilities

Frequently Asked Questions

November 2006

 1.      Is there paperwork beyond the application and criteria forms that is required to demonstrate the "Trauma Care Facility Commitment”?  

Answer:  No. The commitment is demonstrated by completing the
application and criteria and the signature by the Administrator/Chief Executive Officer and by putting the criteria into action. 

2.      What is meant by "participation in Regional Trauma Advisory Councils (RTACs)”?

Answer:  As part of being a State designated Level III or IV Trauma Care Facility, a representative of your hospital must attend the Regional Trauma Advisory Council meetings on a regular basis and keep the hospital administration informed of regional actions and issues.  This is an important criterion that will be looked at during a site visit review.

3.      What happens if a hospital decides not to designate as a Level III, IV or "unclassified" Trauma Care Facility and does not submit the application?

Answer:  1997 Wisconsin Act 154 states that "the rules shall include a method by which to classify all hospitals as to their respective emergency care capabilities”.  If a hospital chooses not to classify at all, the State may perform a site visit and classify the hospital.

4.      Who is required to take an Advanced Life Support Course?

Answer: * Footnote 5 states "Level III and IV Trauma Care Facility physicians involved in the care of trauma patients shall take the Advanced Trauma Life Support Course and the refresher course every four years to meet Continuing Medical Education requirements.  If a physician is currently Emergency Medicine board certified, the Advanced Trauma Life Support course only needs to be completed once."  This means that the Emergency Department physicians and general surgeons who will be caring for trauma patients in a major resuscitation should be Advanced Trauma Life Support certified.  Currently, surgeons re-certify every four years.  Should the new American College of Surgeons recommendations require that surgeons take only the initial Advanced Trauma Life Support Course if they maintain their board certification, the State Trauma Advisory Council will follow the same recommendation.

Footnote 13 states: "The Emergency Department physicians will have three years, from the trauma care facility's classification (July 1, 2005) or from the date of the Emergency Department physician joining the trauma team at the Trauma Care Facility to successfully complete this course."  This will also hold true for general surgeons.

5.      Does the Trauma Service Director have to be a general surgeon?

Answer:  No. This is recommended, but not required. 

6.      If the emergency department physician in a Level III or IV Trauma Care Facility has decided to have the patient transported to a trauma center, does the general surgeon on call still have to come in?

Answer:  Yes.  When the general surgeon is paged for a major trauma patient, he/she must respond to the emergency department regardless of the decision to transfer the patient.  In a Level III Trauma Care Facility the general surgeon is expected to respond for all major trauma patients. He/she shall be a part of the trauma team activation, which is explained in *footnote 6.  The surgeon may need to give operative control of hemorrhage or other necessary treatment prior to transfer.  

In Frequently Asked Questions on the website EMTALA.com it states:  "As noted above, Section 1395dd(d)(1)(C) imposes a penalty on a physician who fails to respond to an emergency situation when he is assigned as the on-call physician."

For Level III and IV Trauma Care Facilities, 30 minutes is the maximum time for the surgeon to respond and this begins at the time of the patient arrival.  

A major trauma patient is defined as a patient who has sustained major or severe injuries to more than one system of a person's body or major injury to a single system of the body and that has the potential of causing death or major disability as defined in Administrative Rule Chapter HFS 118. The minimum criteria that defines a major resuscitation of a trauma patient that requires a surgical response is:

  1. Confirmed systolic blood pressure <90 at any time in adults and age specific hypertension for children

  2. Respiratory compromise/obstruction and/or intubation

  3. Transfer patients from other hospitals receiving blood to maintain vital signs

  4. Emergency physician's discretion

  5. Gunshot wounds to the abdomen, neck, or chest

  6. Glasgow Coma Scale <8 with mechanism attributed to trauma

Your trauma care facility is welcome to add any other criteria as deemed necessary.

7. Clarification:  Footnote 4 - "Any inpatients admitted to a Level IV Trauma Care Facility shall not have injuries requiring major surgical or surgical specialty care”.  This is referring to major trauma patients, not the single limb or hip fracture or other less serious traumatic injuries. 

8. What are some recommended educational courses for nurses?

Answer:

  • Trauma Nursing Core Course (TNCC)

  • Emergency Nursing Pediatric Course (ENPC)

  • Trauma Nurse Specialist (TNS) 

  • Course in Advanced Trauma Nursing (CATN) 

  • Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)

  • Advanced Trauma Care for Nurses (ATCN)

Trauma Coordinators from your Level I and II Verified Centers can provide further information on available educational courses.

9. Do new committees have to be established to perform Performance Improvement on trauma patients?

Answer:  No. You can incorporate your trauma “performance improvement” into existing performance improvement/quality assurance committees as long as the required criteria are met.

10.Clarification: Level III and IV Trauma Care Facilities need to have transfer agreements with (at a minimum) a Level I or II American College of Surgeons Verified Trauma Center in their region.  It is up to the hospital to decide which hospital(s) they will have transfer agreements with depending on where their trauma patient referral and transfer patterns exist.


*Footnotes can be found under the section entitled "Trauma Care Facility Classification/Designation of Wisconsin Hospitals in the Level III and IV Hospital Assessment and Classification Criteria document.

Additional information will be added as frequent questions arise. Contact the EMS Section at (608) 266-1568 to ask or add questions.

Last Revised: March 26, 2009