Our faculty and staff in the Trauma Program of Children's Hospital Colorado are dedicated to improving outcomes for injured patients. Our success is due to the collaboration between all the services that impact injured children.
What our traumatic injury research means for kids
Our translational and basic laboratory research includes studies of pediatric traumatic brain and orthopedic injuries, minimizing blood loss and transfusion, and improving surgical infection outcomes.
- The body's response to blood loss depends on a number of variables — fatigue, hydration and genetics, to name a few — and is notoriously difficult to measure. Children's Colorado trauma surgeon, Steven Moulton, MD, has developed a revolutionary device that makes it look easy. It's the first device in the world capable of reliably measuring blood loss physiology, and it does it in real time in an interface as easy to read as a fuel gauge.
- A group led by Kathleen Adelgais, MD, created an educational module to improve the ability of clinicians to recognize intentional injuries, as opposed to accidental ones, to improve accuracy in reporting suspicions of child abuse. Learners are exposed to many cases in succession, yielding an experience that would take years for an average medical provider to acquire through clinical practice alone.
Contact us at 720-777-6282 or emergency.outreach@childrenscolorado.org.
"Our program is engaged in research, education and advocacy that helps injured children get back to being a kid as quickly as possible."
-STEVEN MOULTON, MD
Trauma Program advancements
The Trauma Program has a very active group of research staff from all disciplines. They participate in clinical projects, federally funded projects through the National Institutes of Health and Department of Defense in the areas of trauma, burn, wound and critical care. The team also uses multiple databases to focus on injury prevention, outcomes and epidemiology.