United Kingdom in
Birmingham, United Kingdom, was the world's first trauma center. Trauma centres grew into existence out of the realisation that traumatic injury is a disease process unto itself requiring specialised and experienced multidisciplinary treatment and specialised resources. The world's first trauma centre, the first hospital to be established specifically to treat injured rather than ill patients, was the
Birmingham Accident Hospital, which opened in
Birmingham, England in 1941 after a series of studies found that the treatment of injured persons within England was inadequate. By 1947, the hospital had three
trauma teams, each including two surgeons and an anaesthetist, and a burns team with three surgeons. The hospital became part of the
National Health Service in its formation in July 1948 and closed in 1993.
United States , a Level I trauma center in
Columbus, Ohio , a Level I trauma center in
Houston , a Level I trauma center in
Miami According to the
CDC, injuries are the leading cause of death for American children and young adults ages 1–19. The leading causes of trauma are motor vehicle collisions, falls, and assaults with a deadly weapon. In the United States, Robert J. Baker and Robert J. Freeark established the first civilian Shock Trauma Unit at Cook County Hospital (opened 1834) in Chicago, Illinois on March 16, 1966. The concept of a shock trauma center was also developed at the
University of Maryland, Baltimore, in the 1950s and 1960s by thoracic surgeon and
shock researcher
R Adams Cowley, who founded what became the
Shock Trauma Center in
Baltimore,
Maryland, on July 1, 1966. The R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center is one of the first shock trauma centers in the world.
Cook County Hospital in Chicago trauma center (opened in 1966). David R. Boyd interned at
Cook County Hospital from 1963 to 1964 before being drafted into the
Army of the United States of America. Upon his release from the Army, Boyd became the first shock-trauma fellow at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, and then went on to develop the National System for
Emergency Medical Services, under
President Ford. In 1968 the American Trauma Society was created by various co-founders, including
R Adams Cowley and
Rene Joyeuse as they saw the importance of increased education and training of emergency providers and for nationwide quality trauma care.
Canada According to the founder of the Trauma Unit at
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in
Toronto, Ontario,
Marvin Tile, "the nature of injuries at Sunnybrook has changed over the years. When the trauma centre first opened in 1976, about 98 per cent of patients suffered from blunt-force trauma caused by accidents and falls. Now, as many as 20 per cent of patients arrive with gunshot and
knife wounds".
Fraser Health Authority in
British Columbia, located at
Royal Columbian Hospital and Abbotsford Regional Hospital, services the BC area, "Each year, Fraser Health treats almost 130,000 trauma patients as part of the integrated B.C. trauma system". ==Definitions in United States==