Kentucky Administrative Regulations
Title 902 - CABINET FOR HEALTH AND FAMILY SERVICES - DEPARTMENT FOR PUBLIC HEALTH
Chapter 28 - Kentucky Trauma System
Section 902 KAR 28:030 - Kentucky's trauma system Level IV criteria
Universal Citation: 902 KY Admin Regs Service 28:030
Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO: KRS 211.490, 211.492, 211.494, 211.496
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY: KRS 211.494(8) authorizes the Department for Public Health to promulgate administrative regulations in accordance with KRS Chapter 13A to implement a statewide trauma care system. This administrative regulation establishes the criteria for a Level IV trauma center in the Kentucky Trauma Care System.
Section 1. Level IV Trauma Centers.
(1)
A hospital that seeks designation as a Level IV trauma center shall meet the
criteria established in this subsection.
(a)
Trauma program.
1. A trauma program shall be
created with agreement from the hospital's board of directors, administration,
and medical staff.
2. The board of
directors, administration, medical, nursing, and ancillary staff shall commit
to provide trauma care at the level for which the facility is seeking trauma
center verification.
3. A board
resolution advising of that commitment shall be submitted with the KYTAC1
application incorporated by reference in
902 KAR
28:020, Section 6.
(b) Trauma services medical director.
1. The trauma services medical director shall
be a physician on staff at the facility.
2. The job description shall include roles
and responsibilities for trauma care, including trauma team formation,
supervision and leadership, and continuing education.
3. The medical director shall act as the
medical staff liaison to administration, nursing staff, and as the primary
contact for that facility with other trauma centers in the region.
4. The medical director shall maintain
certification as an Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) provider if not Board
Certified/Board Eligible by the American Board of Emergency Medicine (ABEM) or
the American Osteopathic Board of Emergency Medicine (AOBEM). Rural Trauma Team
Development Course (RTTDC) participation shall be required for the trauma
services medical director.
(c) Trauma services manager.
1. The facility shall have a trauma services
manager who may be referred to as the trauma coordinator.
2. The manager shall work with the medical
director to coordinate and implement the facility's trauma care
response.
3. The job description of
this position shall include time dedicated to the trauma program, separate from
other duties the program manager may have at the facility.
(d) Emergency department coverage.
1. The facility shall have twenty-four (24)
hour physician coverage of the emergency department and a designated physician
medical director for the emergency department.
2. A mid-level provider, such as a nurse
practitioner or physician's assistant, may serve as the trauma team leader. A
designated emergency department physician shall be present for immediate
consultation during trauma team activations.
(e) Emergency department physicians.
Physicians assigned to the emergency department of a Level IV Trauma Center
shall:
1. Be licensed in the Commonwealth of
Kentucky; and
2.
a. Maintain current Advanced Trauma Life
Support (ATLS) provider certification; or\
b. Be certified by ABEM or
AOBEM.
(f)
Surgical staff.
1. Orthopedic surgery, plastic
surgery, and radiology medical staff availability shall be documented by
published call schedules.
2. If
surgical services are provided, anesthesia coverage shall be
provided.
3. Surgical staff shall
document completion of fifteen (15) hours of annual trauma-related continuing
medical education for surgeons completed every three (3) years as part of the
CME required by the Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure.
4. Surgical specialties participating in the
trauma team shall have at least one (1) representative of its specialty attend
more than half of the hospital's multidisciplinary trauma review committee
meetings.
(g) Prior to
being assigned to the facility's trauma team, nurses responsible for trauma
care at the facility shall have completed one of the following professional
education courses specific to trauma care:
1.
Trauma Nursing Core Course (TNCC); or
2. Advanced Trauma Care for Nurses (ATCN).
(h) Transfer Protocols.
1. The facility shall have a written transfer
protocol describing the method to transfer the trauma patient requiring a
higher level of care.
2. The
transfer protocol shall address:
a. Available
ground or air transport services;
b. Alternative transport services;
c. Receiving trauma centers and trauma
surgeon contact information;
d.
What supplies, records, and resources shall be available for use to affect the
transfer; and
e. Specific anatomic
and physiologic criteria that will immediately initiate transfer to definitive
care.
3. The transfer
protocol shall be developed with involvement of each local ground EMS provider
and regional air medical provider to assure seamless patient care during
transfer and be consistent with the protocol examples found in the Kentucky
Trauma Hospital Resource Manual.
(i) Transfer agreements. A Level IV Trauma
Center shall have:
1. A written agreement
with a verified Level I, II, or III trauma center or a hospital whose
capabilities exceed that of a Level IV facility regarding the transfer and care
of adult and pediatric trauma patients;
2. A written agreement with back-up transfer
agreements specifically for burn patients if the primary regional receiving
facility does not have the required capacity; and
3. Transfer plans that shall be defined and
consistent with the examples found in the Kentucky Trauma Hospital Resource
Manual.
(j) Radiology.
1. The facility shall have a Radiologic
Technologist available on-site twenty-four (24) hours a day to provide basic
plain films used in the evaluation of trauma patients.
2. A twenty (20) minute response time for
trauma team activation shall be required. Response times shall be documented
and monitored by the trauma coordinator and the facility's process improvement
program.
3. The facility shall have
computed tomography and sonography capabilities.
(k) Clinical laboratory.
1. The facility shall have a lab technician
available on duty or on-call twenty-four (24) hours a day to perform basic
studies used in the initial evaluation of trauma patients, including Complete
Blood Count, typing, coagulation profile, and Arterial Blood Gas.
2. A twenty (20) minute response time from
trauma team activation shall be required for a lab technician. Response times
shall be documented and monitored by the trauma coordinator and the facility's
process improvement program.
3. The
lab or facility blood bank shall have at least two (2) units of O-negative
blood available for trauma patients, to be infused at the facility or while
en-route to definitive care.
4.
Access to blood and blood products during an emergency situation if the lab is
not staffed shall be documented.
5.
The facility shall have the capability to conduct microsampling.
(l) Respiratory therapy.
1. The facility shall have a respiratory care
practitioner on duty or on-call twenty-four (24) hours a day to respond to the
emergency department if the trauma team is activated.
2. A twenty (20) minute response time from
trauma team activation shall be required if a respiratory care practitioner is
not on-site. Response times shall be documented and monitored by the trauma
coordinator and the facility's process improvement program.
3. Other trained health care personnel may
fulfill the respiratory care practitioner's role until the designated
respiratory care practitioner arrives.
(2) Trauma Team Activation Protocol. A
facility designated as a Level IV Trauma Center shall have a written trauma
team activation protocol in place that:
(a)
Documents the members of the trauma team and their response requirements if
activated;
(b) Establishes the
criteria based on severity, anatomy, or physiology of the injury for trauma
team activation and provides the names of each person authorized to activate
the trauma team; and
(c) Is
consistent with the examples of trauma team activation protocols found in the
Kentucky Trauma Hospital Resource Manual.
(3) Performance improvement.
(a) A facility designated as a Level IV
Trauma Center shall develop a performance improvement program that includes:
1. An in-house trauma registry or a secure
on-line trauma registry system; and
2. A written policy outlining the quality and
performance improvement (PI) portion of the trauma program, which shall
include:
a. The names of each person
responsible for performing PI reviews;
b. The names of the multidisciplinary trauma
review committee;
c. The
composition by name and position of the morbidity and mortality review
committee;
d. The minimum number of
cases to be reviewed annually including:
(i)
Patients requiring transfer;
(ii)
Record of each trauma death;
(iii)
Noncompliance of trauma team members to response time requirements;
(iv) Bypasses;
(v) Transfers; and
(vi) Trauma care provided by physicians not
meeting minimal education requirements;
e. Frequency of performance improvement
meetings;
f. Minimum requirements
for member attendance by position;
g. Evidence of a quality assurance program as
required by
902 KAR
20:016, Section 3(8)(b)6; and
h. Feedback obtained from patients
transferred to a Level I, II, or III trauma center.
(b) Each performance improvement
program shall be consistent with the examples in the Kentucky Trauma Hospital
Resource Manual.
(4)
Level IV Trauma Center emergency department.
(a) Basic and essential equipment and
supplies for the care and treatment of both adult and pediatric patients shall
be present in a Level IV Trauma Center emergency room.
(b) A Level IV Trauma Center emergency room
shall contain items described as the minimum equipment and supply lists found
in the Kentucky Trauma Hospital Resource Manual.
(5) Level IV Trauma Center operating room.
(a) Any operating room available and used for
the surgical care of victims of trauma shall have the following:
1. Operating room staff available within
thirty (30) minutes of notification;
2. Anesthesia staff available within thirty
(30) minutes of notification; and
3. Age-specific equipment including thermal
control equipment for patients, fluids, and blood products.
(b) C-arm capability shall be
required if orthopedic procedures are to be performed.
(c) Post-anesthetic recovery shall contain
equipment for monitoring and resuscitation, pulse oximetry, and thermal
control.
(d) Required resuscitation
equipment shall include:
1. Airway and
ventilation;
2. Pulse
oximetry;
3. Suction;
4. Electro Cardiogram;
5. Defibrillator;
6. IV administration sets;
7. Large bore vascular catheters;
8. Cricothyroidotomy;
9. Thoracostomy;
10. Emergency drugs;
11. Broselow tape;
12. Fluid warmer,
13. Qualitative CO2 detector; and
14. EMS communication equipment.
(6) Trauma diversion.
(a) The Level IV trauma center shall have a
policy in place that outlines the circumstances that shall trigger a trauma
diversion and the procedures to be followed, including procedures if one (1) or
more hospital resources are functioning at maximum capacity or are otherwise
unavailable.
(b) This process shall
be coordinated with the EMS providers in the service area and potential
receiving facilities.
(c) EMS
providers shall coordinate diversion plans under the provisions of
202 KAR
7:501, Section 5(3).
(d) Examples of trauma diversion protocols
shall be found in the Kentucky Trauma Hospital Resource
Manual.
(7) Other Level
IV requirements. A facility designated as a Level IV trauma center may:
(a) Host or participate in a joint RTTDC
program. Participation by physicians, members of administration, nursing,
ancillary support staff, and local prehospital care providers shall be strongly
encouraged;
(b) Conduct or
participate in local or regional outreach education, specifically ATLS, TNCC,
and ITLS/PHTLS courses, and conduct or participate in local or regional
presentations of traumarelated CME for physicians, nurses, prehospital staff,
and other personnel; and
(c)
Participate in injury prevention programs organized by the facility or in
cooperation with the Kentucky Injury Prevention Research Center (KIPRC), law
enforcement, fire, EMS and other safety organizations. Documentation of injury
prevention program activities shall be available for review during the trauma
center verification or reverification process.
Section 2. Level IV Site Visits.
(1) A hospital may request a site visit from
a peer review team for a consultation visit, a verification visit, or a
reverification visit.
(a) A consultation visit
shall be conducted to assess the facility's system of trauma care delivery or
to prepare for a verification visit.
1. A
consultation visit shall follow the same format as a verification
visit.
2. Site visit reviewers
shall provide recommendations to aid a facility in attaining verification
readiness.
(b) A
verification visit shall be conducted to confirm the facility is performing as
a trauma center according to the criteria listed in Section 1 of this
administrative regulation.
1. Site visit
reviewers shall provide a report of findings to the KyTAC.
2. The KyTAC, upon receipt and review of the
report, shall recommend to the Commissioner of Public Health that:
a. A Certificate of Verification be issued,
and that the Commissioner designate the facility as a Level IV Trauma Center;
or
b. The facility be notified of
deficiencies in writing and a focus review visit scheduled within six (6)
months of the date of the verification visit to identify those deficiencies
that can be isolated and correctable.
(c) A reverification visit shall be requested
by a facility previously issued a certificate of verification if the facility
does not want its certificate of verification and designation to expire.
1. The facility shall schedule a
reverification visit six (6) months prior to the expiration date of its current
certificate of verification and designation as a Level IV Trauma
Center.
2. A facility whose current
certificate of verification has lapsed due to the facility's failure to
initiate reverification shall submit a new KYTAC1 as required by
902 KAR
28:020 and this administrative regulation.
3. A reverification visit shall follow the
same procedures established in subsection (2) of this section.
(2) Site visit teams.
(a) A site visit team shall be composed of a
minimum number of persons as follows:
1.
Consultation visit: Two (2) members;
2. Verification visit: Three (3)
members;
3. Reverification visit:
Three (3) members; or
4. Focus
review visit: Two (2) members, one (1) of whom shall have been on the original
verification team.
(b)
Each site visit team member shall be a member of either the:
1. American College of Surgeons; or
2. American Board of Emergency
Medicine.
(c) The
Commissioner of Public Health shall solicit from the KyTAC two (2) names for
each team member position for the requested visit.
(d) The Commissioner of Public Health shall
select the team members from the list provided and notify KyTAC of the team
members selected.
(e) Only one (1)
of each team's members may be a KyTAC member.
Section 3. Incorporation by Reference.
(1) "Kentucky Trauma Hospital Resource
Manual", April, 2012, is incorporated by reference.
(2) This material may be inspected, copied,
or obtained, subject to applicable copyright law, at the Kentucky Department
for Public Health, Commissioner's Office, 275 East Main Street, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY: 211.494(8)
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Kentucky may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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