The Trauma Center at Penn

The Trauma Center at Penn Established in 1987, Trauma, Surgical Critical Care, and Emergency Surgery provide lifesaving surgic Luke's Hospital in Bethlehem, PA.

Our page describes the activities of the Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care, and Emergency Surgical Services available within the Penn Medicine network. The PennSTAR Critical Care Transport program supports the mission of the Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care, and Emergency Surgical Services

The Trauma Center at Penn was established in 1988 as an accredited Level I Regi

onal Resource Trauma Center serving the population locally here in West Philadelphia, as well as throughout the Philadelphia metropolitan area, through our PennSTAR Flight program. The Trauma Center at Penn has long been considered a national and international model of excellence in trauma and surgical critical care. All of the trauma surgeons are fellowship trained in trauma care and specialize in complex and high-acuity, multi-system trauma. With round the clock support from in-house trauma surgeons and emergency medicine physicians, as well as the dedicated support from the members of the departments of anesthesia, orthopedics, neurosurgery, plastics, ENT, OMF, ophthalmology, vascular, cardiothoracic and physical medicine and rehabilitation, as well as our trauma nurses and allied health partners, the Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care and Emergency Surgery at Penn Medicine is able to offer our patients the most advanced specialty care in the region. In addition to the flagship Trauma Program at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Penn Trauma provides clinical and administrative support to our affiliated trauma programs at Reading Hospital and Medical Center in Reading, PA and St. Surgical Critical Care (SCC) focuses on the care of patients with complex surgical needs, most frequently intra-abdominal pathologies. Surgical Critical Care practices a multidisciplinary approach to the treatment of these patients, with both surgical and anesthesia intensivists, Critical Care Nurse Practitioners, Critical Care Fellows, residents from a variety of specialties, critical care nurses, pharmacists, respiratory therapists, clinical nutritionists, and others to name a few, all participating as members of the treatment team. Emergency Surgical Services (ESS) offers in-house coverage by an attending surgeon with expedient operating room availability 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Expertise and vast experience in managing acute surgical emergencies include, but are not limited to; abdominal catastrophes secondary to bowel perforation, obstruction or fistulization, abdominal compartment syndrome, severe necrotizing soft tissue infections, and biliary obstruction. We cater to the highly complex general and emergency surgical issues that could overwhelm a community hospital’s human and technical resources. The PennSTAR Critical Care Transport program provides both air and ground transport of critically ill or injured patients. With a fleet of 6 helicopters strategically located throughout the metropolitan Philadelphia and South Jersey regions, patients are never more than 20 minutes from a PennSTAR helicopter. The helicopters provide on-scene response for traumatic injuries, as well as performing inter-facility transports of patients with complex medical, surgical, or traumatic pathologies. Ground critical care ambulances are available for inter-facility transfer of patients located nearer to a Penn Medicine facility or when weather prohibits flight. The helicopter and ambulance crews each consist of critical nurses and paramedics with extensive experience in critical care transport medicine.

It's Community Health Improvement Week. Falls are one of the leading causes of serious injury in older adults, and Tai C...
06/09/2026

It's Community Health Improvement Week.

Falls are one of the leading causes of serious injury in older adults, and Tai Chi is one of the most effective tools we have to prevent them. Research shows it improves balance, builds core strength, and boosts confidence in your own body.

Penn Trauma offers a free virtual Tai Chi program you can do from home, on your phone or computer, on your own schedule.

Get started at pennmedicine.org/taichi

Happy Pride from the Penn Trauma team. We see you, we celebrate you, and we are proud to serve you in our community.    ...
06/07/2026

Happy Pride from the Penn Trauma team.

We see you, we celebrate you, and we are proud to serve you in our community.

These are our streets. These are our neighbors. This is our community. For the our team, gun violence has never been abs...
06/05/2026

These are our streets.

These are our neighbors.

This is our community.

For the our team, gun violence has never been abstract.

We see it, we treat it, and we sit with patients and families in their hardest moments.

Today we wear orange for every person behind every street on this map. We are committed to seeing this end.

Today is National SAFE Day. Safe storage saves lives.If you live in Philadelphia or Delaware County, we can help.Visit p...
06/04/2026

Today is National SAFE Day.

Safe storage saves lives.

If you live in Philadelphia or Delaware County, we can help.

Visit pennmedicine.org/firearmsafety to learn more about getting a free gun safe.

Today is World Bicycle Day. In our neighborhoods, a bike is how a lot of people get to work, get to school, and get thro...
06/03/2026

Today is World Bicycle Day. In our neighborhoods, a bike is how a lot of people get to work, get to school, and get through their day.

We see what happens when drivers aren't paying attention. Keeping cyclists safe on Philadelphia streets is everyone's job β€” not just the person on the bike.

Share this with someone who drives in the city.

May is Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month, and we closed it out the right way.Earlier this month, riders pulled up to Rev...
05/31/2026

May is Motorcycle Safety Awareness Month, and we closed it out the right way.

Earlier this month, riders pulled up to RevZilla Philadelphia for a day of real talk about what happens after a crash, and what you can do about it.

Here is what we covered:
-What to do at a crash scene. Most people freeze. We talked through exactly what to do in those first critical minutes before EMS arrives, because the person standing there is often the one who makes the difference.
-Bleeding control. Severe bleeding can be fatal in minutes. We put hands on tourniquets and wound packing, because knowing it and doing it are two different things.
-CPR. Because sometimes bleeding control is not enough and you need to know what comes next.
-Helmet safety and gear. Not all helmets are created equal. The RevZilla team broke down what to look for, what to avoid, and why the gear you wear before a crash is the most important decision you make as a rider.

None of this happens without an incredible group of partners who showed up and made the day what it was. A huge thank you to our host RevZilla Philadelphia, and to PennDOT, Tower Health Reading Hospital, Rider Training of NJ, Philadelphia Highway Patrol, PennCAMP, and Penn Community Violence Intervention for bringing your expertise and your passion for keeping riders safe.
See you next year. πŸοΈπŸ’™



Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) Philadelphia Police Department

Today is National E-Bike Day, and we are celebrating the way a lot of Philadelphians are getting around these days. E-bi...
05/27/2026

Today is National E-Bike Day, and we are celebrating the way a lot of Philadelphians are getting around these days. E-bikes are a great way to move through the city. We want to make sure you get home safe every time you ride.

Here is what we see too often at Penn Trauma:
- Riders without helmets. E-bikes are not regular bikes. They move faster, sometimes up to 28 miles per hour, and the injuries we see when riders go down without a helmet are serious. Wear one. Every ride. No exceptions.
- Speed and traffic. That extra power is part of what makes e-bikes so appealing, but it also means less time to react. Ride at a speed that gives you room to stop. Watch for car doors, pedestrians stepping off curbs, and drivers who are not expecting you to be moving as fast as you are.

E-bikes are here to stay in Philadelphia and we are glad for it. Just ride like your head matters, because it does. πŸ’™

05/25/2026

Today is Memorial Day, a day to honor every service member who gave their life for this country.

At Penn Trauma, this day carries a name.

Dr. John Paul Pryor was a trauma surgeon here at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center and a US Army Reserve officer who was killed in Iraq on Christmas Day, 2008. He was 42 years old. The Army awarded him a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star, and a Meritorious Service Medal among many other decorations.

On his wall hung a quote from Albert Schweitzer: ""Seek always to do some good, somewhere.""

Our trauma bay bears his name: the John Paul Pryor, MD, Shock Trauma and Resuscitation Unit. Every life saved there is part of his legacy.

Today we remember Dr. Pryor, and every man and woman who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to this country. We are grateful beyond words.πŸ’™

Memorial Day weekend is here, and grill season is officially open in Philadelphia. πŸ”₯We put together a quick reminder of ...
05/23/2026

Memorial Day weekend is here, and grill season is officially open in Philadelphia. πŸ”₯

We put together a quick reminder of what to keep in mind before you fire it up this weekend. And one more tip that didn't fit on the label:
If someone gets burned, cool it under running water for at least 10 minutes. No butter, no ice, no toothpaste. Just cool running water.

Have a safe, delicious, and well deserved long weekend Philadelphia. We will be here if you need us, but we are really hoping you don't. πŸ’™

Today is National Stop the Bleed Day, and we want to ask you something important.If someone near you was bleeding severe...
05/21/2026

Today is National Stop the Bleed Day, and we want to ask you something important.

If someone near you was bleeding severely right now, would you know what to do?
Severe bleeding is one of the leading causes of preventable death in the United States. A person can die from severe blood loss in as little as five minutes, before an ambulance ever arrives. That means the person who saves a life is often not a paramedic or a nurse. It is whoever is standing right there.

Stop the Bleed teaches three simple actions: apply pressure, pack the wound, and use a tourniquet. That is it. Anyone can learn this. And Good Samaritan laws in Pennsylvania protect you when you step up to help.

Penn Trauma offers free Stop the Bleed training right here in Philadelphia. It takes about two hours and could save someone's life.
Sign up for a free class today.

πŸ‘‰ www.pennmedicine.org/stopthebleed

Address

3800 Powelton Avenue
Philadelphia, PA
19104

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