National University Hospital (NUH), the main teaching hospital of the country’s top-ranking National University of Singapore, announced this month the opening of a center focused on providing trauma care to vulnerable groups, particularly children, older adults, and migrant workers.
According to the NUH, the center will use a code system to reduce the time between admission to the emergency department and the transfer to an operating theatre. Code Trauma involves the mobilization of all essential staff, including emergency physicians, nurses, surgeons, and anesthesiologists, to accelerate decision-making and response for patients with polytrauma or multiple injuries.
“The National University Centre for Trauma represents decades of efforts in refining our trauma care expertise for our injured patients to return to their lives and achieve their dreams. It also aims to prevent trauma from occurring in the first place with data-driven injury prevention efforts,” said National University Centre for Trauma Director Raj Menon.
In line with this, the hospital has rolled out a multi-disciplinary clinic that provides services for recovering trauma patients and conducts meetings to enhance care, rehabilitation, and psychosocial recovery pathways.
Today, NUH has over 1,200 beds and serves more than 1 million patients a year with over 50 medical, surgical, and dental specialties. NUH is the only public and not-for-profit hospital in Singapore that provides care for adults, women and children under one roof, including the country’s only pediatric kidney and liver transplant program.