The Brain and Spine Institute is made up of experts in the field of neuroscience in order to bring patients the best healthcare in East Tennessee for a full range of neurological diseases and disorders.
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The Brain and Spine Institute is made up of experts in the field of neuroscience in order to bring patients the best healthcare in East Tennessee for a full range of neurological diseases and disorders.
We provide a comprehensive continuum of cancer services, including prevention, outreach, diagnostic, treatment and support services delivered by our highly skilled staff with compassion and care.
The Center for Women & Children's Health is a hub for supporting women's and children's individual healthcare needs. The center provides support, research and unmatched patient-centered care.
Emergency and Trauma Services is the only Level I Trauma Center in the area and serves as the tertiary referral center for medical care in East Tennessee, serving Knox County and 21 surrounding counties.
The Heart Lung Vascular Institute brings together expertise in clinical care, teaching and research. Patients receive exceptional healthcare combined with patient-centered care.

Trauma Medical Director’s Introduction
The University of Tennessee Medical Center, like other Level I Trauma Centers, serves as the center of a regionalized system of healthcare. We provide education for caregivers, patients, and the public. We do research to ensure that we are always providing state-of-the-art care. And, we are available to provide care for the most critically ill and injured patients 24-hours-a-day, every day. The Medical Center provides these services for a region which includes much of East Tennessee, as well as portions of several surrounding states.
Several issues continue to face all regional referral centers; for example, the “costs of preparedness”—that is, the cost of having all of the people and equipment necessary to care for these patients available 24-hours-per-day. Another issue is the ability to transfer patients who need rehabilitation to facilities that are more appropriate once the patient’s acute care needs are met. Finally, with more severely injured and ill patients arriving and not leaving as quickly, access and space becomes an issue, leading to the need for more careful triage of patients and a potential limitation of surge capacity, or the ability to handle patients in times of crisis.
These problems are being recognized, both at the state and federal level, but much work remains to be done. This report shows how The University of Tennessee Medical Center continues to provide regionalized care for injured patients. We invite you to read this report, taking a tour of the trauma center and meeting some of the people who are there, every hour of every day, waiting to care for severely injured patients.
Click here to read the full report.
Thank you,
Blaine L. Enderson, MD, MBA, FACS, FCCM
Professor of Surgery and Chief
Division of Trauma/Critical Care
General Surgery, Trauma and Critical Care