Trauma Day Provides Firsthand Learning Experience | April 2018
Skip to main content

Trauma Day Provides Firsthand Learning Experience


April 25, 2018

Various Gwinnett health professions students collaborated to provide emergency care during simulated exercises.


Trauma Day, held Tuesday, April 17, 2018, on the campus of Georgia Campus 鈥 色中色 (GA-PCOM), provided health professions students from Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC), Gwinnett Technical College and GA-PCOM an opportunity to work together as they treated 鈥減atients鈥 suffering from a range of injuries and ailments.

Organizers created a mock call center and triage area. Gwinnett Tech鈥檚 Emergency Medical Services (EMS) students were dispatched around campus and the surrounding area to bring simulated patients鈥攅ither mannequins or patient actors鈥攖o GA-PCOM鈥檚 3,500-square-foot Simulation Center, which includes emergency medicine training facilities. GGC nursing students assessed patients and GA-PCOM osteopathic medicine students then conducted next level evaluations and began treatment.

Some 鈥減atients鈥 were sent to the Simulation Center鈥檚 surgery suite for continuing care. GA-PCOM鈥檚 Dr. Don Penney, clinical professor of emergency medicine, and Dr. Frank Jones, clinical professor of surgery, performed simulated surgeries with the assistance of Gwinnett Tech鈥檚 surgical tech students and GA-PCOM鈥檚 student doctors.

鈥淚t takes a village to take care of one patient,鈥 said Sharon Grason, director of GGC鈥檚 nursing program. Osteopathic medicine student Abdul Walters (DO 鈥20) participated in the Trauma Day exercises and noted that nursing students were vigilant in verifying prescription dosing before administering medicine to patients, closing the ordering loop.

Jeffery Adams, NREMP-P, MA, BS, who serves as GA-PCOM鈥檚 director of simulation, spoke of the event鈥檚 opportunity to provide collaboration between medical disciplines.

鈥淪tudents learned mutual respect throughout the day-long exercises,鈥 Adams said.

The students worked together on 24 scenarios including a human trafficking case, an opioid overdose, a gunshot wound, a schizophrenic episode, a heart attack, a septic newborn and a motor vehicle accident involving a pregnant driver.

The cases were designed by GA-PCOM鈥檚 biomedical sciences students who are taking the medical simulation concentration. The cases were vetted by physician faculty members for medical accuracy. Instructors from the three colleges worked alongside students to ensure appropriate and quality care for the patients.

GA-PCOM Associate Dean for Clinical Integration Michael Sampson, DO, FAOASM, explained the Trauma Day exercises increase the level of experience and exposure for students coming out of school.

鈥淭rauma Day breeds teamwork and collaboration between all disciplines of medical care鈥攊t鈥檚 interprofessional education at its finest,鈥 Sampson added.

Dr. Sampson also said GA-PCOM鈥檚 physician assistant, pharmacy and physical therapy students will be invited to participate in future Trauma Day simulations.

To prepare the DO students for Trauma Day, weekly simulation exercises known as 鈥淪im Battles鈥 were run throughout the year for second-year DO students. Student teams competed and were judged by clinical faculty members. The top four teams were selected to participate in Trauma Day.

According to Dr. Sampson, the top team was named Sim Battle Champion and awarded a championship belt. The team member names were placed on the belt for display in the Simulation Center. The ultimate goal of Sim Battles, Sampson noted, is to prepare for the national Simulation Olympics, held annually.

Event organizers expressed thanks to the faculty and students at GGC, Gwinnett Tech and Amerimed EMS of Buford, which supplied an ambulance for the training exercises.

Other GA-PCOM faculty members who participated in Trauma Day included Clinical Professor Gary Freed, DO; Clinical Assistant Professor Renee Himmelbaum, DO; Clinical Assistant Professor Colette Bullock, DO; and Assistant Professor of Family Medicine Lauren Ball, DO.

You May Also Like:

About PCOM Georgia

PCOM Georgia has been serving students and the community for 20 years as a branch campus of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM), a private, not-for-profit, accredited institution of higher education established in 1899. Located in Suwanee (Gwinnett County), PCOM Georgia offers doctoral degrees in osteopathic medicine, pharmacy and physical therapy. Graduate degrees are offered in biomedical sciences, medical laboratory science and physician assistant studies. The campus joins PCOM South Georgia in Moultrie in helping to meet the healthcare needs of the state. Emphasizing "a whole person" approach to care, PCOM Georgia focuses on educational excellence, interprofessional education and service to the community. For more information, visit pcom.edu or call 678-225-7500. The campus is also home to the Georgia Osteopathic Care Center, an osteopathic manipulative medicine clinic, which is open to the public by appointment. For more information, visit .

Contact Us

For general media inquiries, please contact the Office of Marketing and Communications at 215-871-6300 or communications@pcom.edu. Visit our media relations page to view contact information for public relations personnel.

Connect with PCOM Georgia

X