With multiple degrees and residency experience from some of the nation’s top schools and hospitals, such as Stanford Medical School, Georgetown, and Johns Hopkins, Dr. Erin C. Hall has no shortage of experience and expertise under her belt, which is why she is employed at one of the top trauma centers in the country.
On this week’s episode of Trauma Ties, brought to life by the Network for Victim Recovery of DC (NVRDC) and hosted by Bridgette Stumpf and Lindsey Silverberg, Dr. Hall discusses her work as a trauma surgeon at MedStar Washington Hospital Center and the Medical Director for both the Surgical Intensive Care Unit and the Community Violence Intervention Program (CVIP).
During this episode, the three women delve into the lasting realities of physical trauma and the ways in which Dr. Hall, through her work with CVIP, hopes to bridge the gap between acute and immediate medical care and the lasting physical and emotional effects of trauma.
Name: Dr. Erin C. Hall, MD MPH FACS
What she does: Dr. Hall is a trauma surgeon at MedStar Washington Hospital Center, where she serves as Medical Director for the Surgical Intensive Care Unit and the Medical Director of the hospital’s Community Violence Intervention Program.
Company: MedStar Washington Hospital Center
[05:15] Striving for change: Dr. Hall discusses the sequelae of the patients she sees in the trauma operation room. In other words, the effects of the patient’s trauma aside from just the physical injuries, such as the mental, emotional, and social changes that are also a result of their pain.
[11:10] The seen and unseen: Host Bridgette Stumpf conveys the differences between physical and psychological trauma, which ultimately comes down to the one being visible (physical) and the other being invisible (psychological).
[16:04] Human rights: Dr. Hall believes, unequivocally, that health is a human right. One of the aspects she loves so much about being a trauma surgeon is the lack of judgment in the OR. When a patient comes in, there is no time for wondering who they are outside of a person in need of immediate help.
[20:07] CVIP: As the Medical Director of MedStar Health Community Violence Intervention Program, Dr. Hall talks about bridging the gap between inpatient medical treatment and post-treatment care for the six months following patient discharge.
[29:11] The value of understanding: Bridgette details her own personal trauma and experiences with medical professionals when it felt as though they did not care about or understand her worries and concerns.
[47:13] Trauma-informed care: Working at one of the nation’s top centers for trauma care, Dr. Hall talks about seeing a shift in care and language. She says there is a real shift toward all encompassing trauma-informed care.