%0 Journal Article %A T E Madsen %A J R Bledsoe %A P J Bossart %T Observation unit admission as an alternative to inpatient admission for trauma activation patients %D 2009 %R 10.1136/emj.2008.064626 %J Emergency Medicine Journal %P 421-423 %V 26 %N 6 %X Background: At this 35 000 visits/year emergency department (ED) at a level one trauma centre, a trauma protocol was implemented for the ED observation unit. Data on all trauma observation unit admissions were then collected to evaluate for safety, efficiency and admission rates.Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed of all trauma patients in the observation unit during a 14-month period. Exclusion criteria for observation unit admission included: abnormal vital signs, positive focussed abdominal sonography for trauma examination, abnormal ECG, abnormal chest radiograph, abnormal head computed tomography, Glasgow coma score less than 14, or multisystem trauma.Results: 364 trauma patients were admitted to the observation unit. 84.6% were trauma II activations and 3.8% were trauma I activations. There were no deaths, intubations, loss of vital signs or other adverse events. The average length of stay was 12 h 46 minutes and 11.5% of patients were admitted to an inpatient unit. At 30-day follow-up, there were no significant missed injuries.Conclusion: The observation unit is a safe alternative to inpatient admission for the evaluation of the minimally injured trauma activation patient. %U https://emj.bmj.com/content/emermed/26/6/421.full.pdf