Trauma in a sentence as a noun

I'm a software engineer, and she's a medical device rep in trauma.

If you understand basic medicine and tissue trauma, you'll be able to stomach what you'll see along the way.

It suggests that the bonding is the individuals response to trauma in becoming a victim.

But under tort theories, for instance, the idea of making a victim whole could easily mean compensating her for emotional trauma and the like.

The mental trauma of being in a US prison and permanent unemployability from a felony record causes far more hardship to a person than the act of smoking.

However, a ******* normally requires depression or some linked emotional trauma.

On multivariate analysis, uninsured patients had an increased odds of death than insured patients, in both penetrating and blunt trauma patients.

If you're a normal person with a family and their own field of expertise who doesn't have time to take an EMT course and learn how to intubate an unconscious blunt force trauma victim, well then **** you.

Fascinating account of post-7/7 behavioural trauma, and how hard it was to do the right thing; it shows up both in Daniel's reaction and those of other commenters who've been in similar situations.

Worse yet, rape and sexual assault is rampant in our prison systems, and this becomes a trauma that many inmates are forced to deal with and makes it even more difficult for them to integrate into civil society.

Diagnosis of medical comorbidities may be a marker of access to health care and may be associated with treatment, which may explain the gap in mortality rates between insured and uninsured trauma patients.

* What really worked- Philosophy; Getting a genuine core philosophy and actively deciding my values gave me a lot of strength.\n- Openness; being extremely honest about my shortcomings with deserving people lead to a form of intimacy\n that makes the trauma not seem so bad any more.\n- "Taking the pain"; This is not the same as sucking it up.

Trauma definitions

noun

any physical damage to the body caused by violence or accident or fracture etc.

See also: injury hurt harm

noun

an emotional wound or shock often having long-lasting effects