Milwaukee Hospitals and Trauma Centers After an Accident
Milwaukee has one adult Level I trauma center — Froedtert Hospital (9200 W. Wisconsin Ave., Wauwatosa) — and one Level I pediatric trauma center at Children's Wisconsin (8915 W. Connell Ct., Wauwatosa). Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center is a Level III trauma center, and several other hospitals hold Level IV designations. If you or someone you are with has been seriously injured in a car accident, fall, or other incident, these hospitals provide the highest levels of emergency trauma care in the Milwaukee metro area. Here is what you need to know about each facility, when to go to the ER versus urgent care, and how your medical treatment connects to your personal injury claim.
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Key Takeaways
- Froedtert Hospital (9200 W. Wisconsin Ave., Wauwatosa, WI 53226) is Milwaukee's only adult Level I trauma center — the highest designation from the American College of Surgeons. It has 24/7 surgical teams, neurosurgeons, and critical care specialists on site.
- Children's Wisconsin (8915 W. Connell Ct., Wauwatosa, WI 53226) is a Level I pediatric trauma center — one of only two in Wisconsin — with dedicated pediatric trauma specialists on call 24/7.
- Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center (2900 W. Oklahoma Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53215) is a Level III trauma center — the largest hospital in the Advocate Aurora Health system with 896 beds and 24-hour emergency coverage.
- Call 911 for any accident involving loss of consciousness, heavy bleeding, suspected broken bones, chest or abdominal pain, or difficulty breathing. Paramedics will transport you to the nearest appropriate trauma center based on injury severity.
- Go to the ER (not urgent care) if your injuries developed after leaving the accident scene — delayed symptoms like severe headaches, neck pain, numbness, or abdominal pain can indicate serious internal injuries.
- Your emergency room visit creates the medical documentation that anchors your personal injury claim — the ER records establish a direct connection between the accident and your injuries.
Level I trauma center in Milwaukee
A Level I trauma center is the highest designation a hospital can receive from the American College of Surgeons. It means the hospital has 24-hour in-house coverage by general surgeons, orthopedic surgeons, neurosurgeons, anesthesiologists, and other specialists. These hospitals handle the most severe, life-threatening injuries — major car accidents, falls from significant heights, gunshot wounds, and multi-system trauma. Milwaukee has one adult Level I trauma center.
Froedtert Hospital — 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue, Wauwatosa, WI 53226. Phone: (414) 805-3000. Froedtert is the only ACS-verified adult Level I trauma center in the Milwaukee metro area and one of only three in all of Wisconsin. It is also the region's only verified burn center. Froedtert has over 600 beds and is the primary teaching hospital for the Medical College of Wisconsin. Trauma surgical teams, neurosurgeons, orthopedic surgeons, and critical care specialists are on site 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Froedtert's emergency department treats over 45,000 patients annually and is the designated regional trauma center for southeastern Wisconsin.
Level III trauma center in Milwaukee
A Level III trauma center provides 24-hour emergency department coverage with surgical capability and has transfer agreements with Level I centers for the most complex cases. Level III centers can handle many trauma cases and play a critical role in communities where they may be the closest hospital to an accident scene.
Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center — 2900 West Oklahoma Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53215. Phone: (414) 649-6000. Aurora St. Luke's is a Level III trauma center and the largest hospital in the Advocate Aurora Health system with 896 beds. Located on Milwaukee's south side, it provides 24-hour emergency department coverage and can stabilize and treat many trauma cases. For the most severe injuries — major traumatic brain injuries, complex burns, or multi-system trauma — St. Luke's transfers patients to Froedtert Hospital. St. Luke's south-side location makes it a common destination for accidents on I-94, I-43, and the surrounding neighborhoods.
Level IV trauma centers in Milwaukee
A Level IV trauma center provides initial evaluation, stabilization, and diagnostic capabilities for injured patients, with established transfer protocols to higher-level centers for cases requiring more advanced surgical or critical care. Milwaukee has several Level IV trauma centers that serve as important first points of contact after an accident.
Aurora Sinai Medical Center — 945 North 12th Street, Milwaukee, WI 53233. Phone: (414) 219-2000. Aurora Sinai is a Level IV trauma center with a 24/7 emergency department on Milwaukee's near west side. It handles a high volume of emergency visits and can provide initial stabilization and evaluation for accident injuries, with transfer protocols to Froedtert for the most serious cases.
Ascension Columbia St. Mary's Hospital — 2323 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, WI 53211. Phone: (414) 291-1000. Columbia St. Mary's is a Level IV trauma center and Comprehensive Stroke Center on Milwaukee's east side. It has a 24-hour emergency department and can stabilize trauma patients for transfer to Froedtert when higher-level care is needed.
Pediatric trauma center
If a child is seriously injured in an accident, they need a pediatric trauma center — not just any emergency room. Children's bodies respond differently to trauma than adults, and pediatric trauma surgeons, anesthesiologists, and nurses are specifically trained to treat children's unique physiology. Milwaukee has one Level I pediatric trauma center.
Children's Wisconsin — 8915 West Connell Court, Wauwatosa, WI 53226. Phone: (414) 266-2000. Children's Wisconsin is an ACS-verified Level I pediatric trauma center — one of only two in all of Wisconsin (the other is American Family Children's Hospital in Madison). The hospital has a dedicated pediatric emergency department open 24 hours a day, staffed by specialists trained specifically in pediatric emergency and trauma care. Children's Wisconsin is located on the same Milwaukee Regional Medical Center campus as Froedtert Hospital, so families with both adult and child injuries from the same accident can be treated at adjacent facilities.
Other hospitals in Milwaukee with emergency departments
Not every injury requires a designated trauma center. Milwaukee has additional hospitals with emergency departments that can handle less severe but still significant injuries from car accidents, slip-and-fall incidents, and other accidents.
Ascension St. Francis Hospital — 3237 South 16th Street, Milwaukee, WI 53215. Phone: (414) 647-5000. St. Francis is a Primary Stroke Center and Chest Pain Center with trauma surgeons on staff and a 24-hour emergency department on Milwaukee's south side. It is convenient for accidents on I-94 near the Marquette Interchange and can stabilize patients for transfer to Froedtert when needed.
Aurora West Allis Medical Center — 8901 West Lincoln Avenue, West Allis, WI 53227. Phone: (414) 328-6000. Located just west of Milwaukee in West Allis, this hospital has a 24/7 emergency department and is a convenient option for accidents on I-894 and Highway 100.
When to go to the ER vs. urgent care after an accident
Call 911 or go directly to the emergency room for any of these symptoms after an accident: loss of consciousness (even briefly), heavy or uncontrollable bleeding, suspected broken bones or joint dislocations, chest pain or difficulty breathing, severe abdominal pain, numbness or tingling in your extremities, severe headache or confusion, neck or back pain, or any injury where you cannot move a body part. Paramedics will assess your injuries at the scene and transport you to the nearest appropriate trauma center based on the severity.
Urgent care is appropriate for minor injuries that are not life-threatening but still need medical attention: small cuts requiring stitches, minor sprains and strains, bruises, and general pain that developed after an accident. Milwaukee has numerous urgent care clinics open evenings and weekends that do not require appointments. However, urgent care clinics generally do not have CT scan or MRI capabilities for detecting fractures, internal bleeding, or head injuries.
When in doubt, go to the ER. Many serious injuries from car accidents — internal bleeding, concussions, organ damage, spinal injuries — do not show obvious external symptoms immediately. Adrenaline can mask pain for hours after an accident. Going to the ER creates a medical record that directly connects your injuries to the accident, which is critical for your personal injury claim. Delaying treatment gives the insurance company an argument that your injuries were not caused by the accident or were not serious enough to warrant compensation.
What to tell the ER after an accident
When you arrive at the emergency room, be thorough and specific about what happened and how you feel. Tell the intake nurse and the treating physician exactly how the accident occurred — whether it was a rear-end car crash, a T-bone collision, a slip on a wet floor, or something else. Describe the forces involved: the approximate speed, whether your airbags deployed, whether you were wearing a seatbelt, and whether your body struck anything inside the vehicle.
Report every symptom, no matter how minor it seems. Headache, neck stiffness, tingling in your fingers, ringing in your ears, dizziness, nausea, and back pain can all indicate serious underlying injuries. If you do not report a symptom at the ER, the insurance company may later argue that injury either did not exist at the time of the accident or was caused by something else. Be honest and complete — your ER records will be scrutinized by insurance adjusters and potentially by a jury.
Ask the ER to document everything. Request copies of all imaging (X-rays, CT scans, MRIs), lab work, and the discharge summary. If the doctor recommends follow-up care — an orthopedic specialist, neurologist, or physical therapy — make those appointments immediately. Insurance companies look for gaps in treatment as evidence that your injuries are not as serious as you claim. Consistent follow-up care strengthens your personal injury claim and helps your recovery.
Medical records and your personal injury claim
Your medical records from the ER visit and all follow-up treatment form the backbone of your personal injury claim. Under Wisconsin's modified comparative negligence system (Wis. Stat. § 895.045), you can recover damages as long as your fault does not reach 51%. The amount you recover is reduced by your percentage of fault. Medical records establish two things the insurance company will scrutinize: causation (proving the accident caused your injuries) and damages (proving how much those injuries cost you).
The ER creates what is called the 'contemporaneous medical record' — a real-time account of your injuries documented by a medical professional immediately after the accident. This record is far more persuasive than your own testimony weeks or months later. It includes the mechanism of injury (how the accident happened), your presenting symptoms, the physical examination findings, diagnostic imaging results, the diagnosis, and the treatment provided.
Keep a file of every medical document related to your accident: ER records, imaging reports, specialist consultations, physical therapy notes, prescription records, and bills. Under Wisconsin law, you have 3 years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit (Wis. Stat. § 893.54). If a government entity is involved — the City of Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, WisDOT, MCTS — you must file a notice of claim within 120 days (Wis. Stat. § 893.80). Do not wait until the deadline approaches to organize your records.
Follow-up care: why it matters for your recovery and your claim
After your initial ER visit, follow-up care is critical — both for your physical recovery and for your legal claim. If the ER refers you to an orthopedic surgeon, neurologist, or physical therapist, schedule those appointments within the first week. Insurance adjusters specifically look for treatment gaps — periods where you stopped seeking medical care — to argue that your injuries resolved or were not serious.
Common follow-up referrals after car accidents in Milwaukee include orthopedic specialists for fractures and soft tissue injuries, neurologists for concussions and traumatic brain injuries, physical therapists for rehabilitation, pain management specialists for chronic pain, and mental health professionals for PTSD, anxiety, or depression that often follows traumatic accidents. All of these treatments produce medical records that document the ongoing impact of the accident on your life.
If you cannot afford follow-up care, tell your attorney. Most personal injury attorneys in Milwaukee work on contingency and can help you access medical providers who will treat you on a lien basis — meaning the provider agrees to wait for payment until your case settles. Froedtert Hospital, Ascension, and Advocate Aurora Health all offer financial assistance programs for patients who qualify based on income.
Get Your Free Injury Claim Check
If you have been in an accident in Milwaukee and received medical treatment, get your free Injury Claim Check. You will answer a few quick questions about your accident and injuries, and we will give you a personalized report that includes Wisconsin's filing deadline for your specific claim, your legal options based on the details of your accident, and whether connecting with a Milwaukee personal injury attorney makes sense for your situation.
Your medical records are the foundation of your claim, but understanding the full picture — fault, insurance coverage, deadlines — is just as important. Our Injury Claim Check gives you clear, actionable information about what comes next. Free, confidential, and takes less time than sitting in a waiting room.