Background: Pelvic fractures are complex injuries with high risks of hemorrhage, multisystem involvement, and long-term disability. Optimal outcomes depend on coordinated, interdisciplinary care, particularly from nurses, physiotherapists, and medical secretaries, across the continuum from resuscitation to rehabilitation. Aim: To synthesize role-specific contributions of nurses, physiotherapists, and medical secretaries in orthopedic clinics, using pelvic fracture care as an archetype, and to map these contributions to measurable patient and service outcomes. Methods: Narrative synthesis of current clinical pathways for pelvic fracture evaluation, stabilization, and rehabilitation; role delineation across care phases (prehospital, emergency, operative, inpatient, rehabilitation, and post-discharge); and identification of outcome domains influenced by each profession. Results: Nurses drive hemodynamic surveillance, hemorrhage mitigation, early complication detection, patient/family education, and coordination of trauma protocols; physiotherapists deliver staged mobilization, gait training, pelvic floor and core rehabilitation, and functional capacity rebuilding; medical secretaries enable continuity through scheduling, information flow, documentation integrity, benefits navigation, and inter-service logistics. Interdisciplinary alignment is associated with reduced time-to-stabilization, fewer preventable complications, shorter length of stay, earlier mobilization, improved functional scores, and higher patient satisfaction. Conclusion: In pelvic fracture care, integrating nursing vigilance, physiotherapy-led functional recovery, and medical-secretarial coordination yields superior clinical and operational outcomes. Formalizing shared pathways, handoffs, and metrics should be a strategic priority for orthopedic services.
Albuaijan et al. (Sun,) studied this question.