![]() ![]() Team members remain with the patient until transferred from the emergency department to the operating room, critical care unit or surgical floor. Patients are evaluated and treated simultaneously and expeditiously. When a trauma patient arrives, these team members are already preparing for their arrival. Critical Care and Pediatric Intensive Care Units.Adult and Pediatric Emergency Departments.The trauma team includes members from many departments such as: To be a Level I Trauma Center, it takes a team approach to patient care. Values include:ĬHART (Community Hospital Acceleration, Revitalization, and Transformation Investment Program)ĭSTI (Delivery System Transformation Initiatives Program).As a Level I Trauma Center, Iowa Methodist has the specialists, the experience and the equipment necessary to save lives in an emergency. Indicates which, if any, special funding programs from which the hospital receives assistance. If blank, the facility is not a verified trauma center. Indicates the level of pediatric trauma care ( Level 1 and Level 2), if provided. Indicates the level of adult trauma care ( Level 1, Level 2 and Level 3), if provided. N - facilities that do not have 24-hour emergency departments that accept ambulances. Y - facilities licensed by the state to have an emergency department open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Total number of staffed beds based on review by CHIA in the fall of 2018 Tax status of the hospital ( For profit, Non-profit, Public) Hospital system affiliation or parent organization Specialty hospitals are not considered a cohort for comparison and analysis by CHIA but may be included in statewide analyses. Specialty Hospitals provide unique sets of services and serve unique patient populations. Teaching Hospitals are hospitals that report at least 25 full-time equivalent medical school residents per 100 inpatient beds in accordance with the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) and are not classified as AMCs.Ĭommunity Hospitals are hospitals that do not meet the MedPAC definition to be classified as teaching hospitals and have a public payer mix of less than 63%.Ĭommunity-High Public Payer (HPP) Hospitals are community hospitals that have 63% or greater of Gross Patient Service Revenue (GPSR) attributable to Medicare, MassHealth, and other government payers, including the Health Safety Net. AMCs are characterized by extensive research and teaching programs, comprehensive resources for tertiary and quaternary care, being principal teaching hospitals for their respective medical schools, and being full service hospitals with case mix intensity greater than 5% above the statewide average. General classification of hospital according to CHIA:Īcademic Medical Centers (AMCs) are a subset of teaching hospitals. DPH Office of Emergency Medical Services Region Mailing address city/town of the hospitalĬity/town in which the hospital is geographically located according to MassGIS Political Boundary data Hospital address (street number and name) ![]() Hospital name often used by EMTs when locating emergency departments, usually the familiar campus name Hospital name may include hospital corporate system name and/or campus name ![]()
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