A medical transport helicopter takes off from University of Louisville Hospital.

has been re-verified as a Level I Trauma Center by the , recognizing the hospital鈥檚 dedication to providing the highest quality of trauma care for all injured patients. 聽

A team of experienced reviewers in the field of trauma conducted an on-site review of the hospital in July, and the hospital received word of the re-verification this month in an official letter. The verification process provides confirmation the hospital has demonstrated its commitment to providing optimal care.

鈥淭he re-verification is acknowledgement of all the hard work that happens here at UofL Hospital every day,鈥 said Kim Denzik, MSN, RN, director of the UofL Hospital Trauma Institute. 鈥淭here is a tremendous amount of work and preparation that goes into the trauma review. There are a lot of people to be thanked for their continued hard work, diligence and commitment to providing the very best care for our patients.鈥

The re-verification came from the Committee, an ad hoc committee of the group鈥檚 .

The Committee on Trauma鈥檚 verification program does not designate trauma centers, rather it provides confirmation that a trauma center has demonstrated its commitment to providing the highest quality of trauma care. The actual establishment and designation of a trauma center is the function of local, regional or state agencies. However, verified trauma centers must meet essential criteria that ensure trauma care capability and institutional performance as outlined by the Committee on Trauma.

Having the expert level of care here in Louisville is important to patients like Brandon Clark, who was in a dirt bike accident in March 2017 at age 19.

鈥淚 was at my girlfriend鈥檚 house racing my brother when the throttle got stuck and I was thrown 53 feet,鈥 Clark said. He was transported from Floyds Knobs, Indiana, to UofL Hospital, where he was diagnosed with a broken femur and a separated shoulder. He underwent surgery with an orthopedic specialist at UofL Hospital the next morning.

鈥淚t was very rough in the beginning,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淚 was just 19, and I couldn鈥檛 even walk. I left the hospital in a wheelchair. I wanted to give up on life. But nobody there let me give up.鈥

By August 2018, he was walking again at the Kentucky State Fair. It was there he ran into a member of the Trauma Center鈥檚 staff, Annabelle Pike.

鈥淚 wanted to tell her just how great it felt to be walking again. I wouldn鈥檛 be here without the staff at UofL Hospital. They work with you a lot. They want to help you out the most,鈥 he said.

He’s now going to the University of Northwestern Ohio to be a diesel mechanic, and driving home on weekends to do farming and construction work from his home in Ballardsville. On Oct. 16, he said he was able to run a mile, just a year and a half after his stay at UofL Hospital.

He said he鈥檚 appreciative of the second chance he was given. 鈥淚t made me realize you can lose your life in the blink of an eye.鈥

There are five separate categories of verification in the Committee on Trauma鈥檚 program: Level I Trauma Center; Level II Trauma Center; Level III Trauma Center; Level I Pediatric Trauma Center; and Level II Pediatric Trauma Center. Each has specific criteria that must be met. UofL Hospital is one of just two adult Level I Trauma Centers in the state of Kentucky, with the other at the University of Kentucky鈥檚 Albert B. Chandler Hospital.