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A Comment On Management of Spinal Injuries in the October 2005 Pakistan Earthquake

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2013

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Abstract

Type
Letters to the Editor
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Inc. 2011

To the Editor: We read with interest the letter by Butt et al about the experience of a makeshift spinal cord injury (SCI) rehabilitation centere established after the 2005 Pakistani earthquake.Reference Butt, Bhatti, Manzoor, Malik and Shafi1 We were with 1 of the teams that supervised the management and rehabilitation of hundreds of patients with SCI in the earthquake and have described our experiences in several articles.Reference Rathore, Rashid, Butt, Malik, Gill and Haig2Reference Rathore, Farooq, Butt and Gill3Reference Rathore, Hanif, New, Butt, Aasi and Khan4Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5Reference Rathore, Butt, Aasi and Farooq6 As residents, we regularly visited the makeshift spinal centers to facilitate their management. We make the following observations:

  • The team of Butt and colleagues was a mix of senior and junior consultants, registrars, residents, and house officers, all from the Department of Internal Medicine. Their dedication was commendable and their team spirit unsurpassed. To the best of our knowledge, there is no report in the biomedical literature in which physicians in internal medicine successfully supervised the management and rehabilitation of such a large number of patients with SCI in postdisaster scenarios.

  • At the time of the 2005 disaster, SCI rehabilitation in Pakistan was literally nonexistent, with only a few centers. The majority of patients with SCI were received in the hospitals in Rawalpindi and Islamabad; however, apart from the Armed Forces Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, initially, no rehabilitation specialists were available to facilitate SCI rehabilitation.Reference Rathore, Rashid, Butt, Malik, Gill and Haig2 Ours was the only equipped spinal rehabilitation unit in Islamabad and Rawalpindi. We expanded our indoor bed capacity from 100 to 140 in 2 weeks and dedicated approximately 70 beds to patients with SCI. Nevertheless, reportedly 650 to 750 more patients with SCI could not be accommodated at this single center, hence the need for makeshift spinal centers.

  • Three makeshift spinal centers were established and admitted more than 300 patients. Only 1 of the centers, at the National Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, was upgraded to a permanent facility; the rest were closed. These centers helped to save hundreds of paralyzed patients who otherwise were “the most neglected of all patients injured in the earthquake.”Reference Umer, Rashid, Zafar and Majeed7

  • Good intentions can never replace medical expertise. This was the case with the makeshift spinal centers, which were managed by medical physicians and even gynecologists.Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5 Although they saved lives in the acute postdisaster phase, adequate SCI rehabilitation could not be provided to all of the patients. The rate of complications, notably pressure ulcers, urinary tract infections, and deep vein thrombosis, was high,Reference Rathore, Rashid, Butt, Malik, Gill and Haig2Reference Rathore, Hanif, New, Butt, Aasi and Khan4Reference Rathore, Butt, Aasi and Farooq6Reference Tauqir, Mirza, Gul, Ghaffar and Zafar8 and there were concerns about inadequate and inaccurate assessments of these patients.Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5

  • Patients with SCI under primary physiatrist care had a reduced incidence of complications, better functional outcomes, and community reintegration as compared with patients under nonphysiatrist care, including in the makeshift spinal centers.Reference Rathore, Rashid, Butt, Malik, Gill and Haig2Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5

  • Some important aspects of SCI rehabilitation were avoided or missed in the makeshift spinal centers, including sexual rehabilitation, realistic counseling about patients' prognosis regarding complete lesions, and vocational counseling and job placement. Moreover, unregulated philanthropic monetary support hampered and unnecessarily delayed the discharge of many patients who did not want to part with a ready source of income.Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5

  • Once the makeshift spinal centers were closed, there was no adequate facility that could accommodate such a large number of patients with SCI. Most of them were sent home to the mountainous terrain of Kashmir. At 18 months' follow-up, our team could not find a single quadriplegic survivor of the earthquake.Reference Butt, Bhatti, Manzoor, Malik and Shafi1 Patients developed pressure ulcers in large numbers, and there were cases of surgical wound infections and implant failures. Four years after the disaster, we confirmed 15 deaths, mostly from large, dirty wounds (probably pressure ulcers) and malodorous urine and high-grade fevers (likely urosepsis). Results such as these clearly highlight the inadequacy of our health care system regarding long-term follow-up of patients with SCI.

  • The Pakistani earthquake and other global disasters have demonstrated the effectiveness of a dedicated team of physiatrists offering early rehabilitation services in serious disabilities like SCI,Reference Gosney9 and have confirmed that medical rehabilitation is an urgent emergency service, not just a later part of the recovery process. Early physiatrist involvement in complex orthopedic and neurological trauma has shown to be of benefit in times of peace, but it is likely to be more effective in disasters.

  • Experience with this earthquake has shown that SCIs in large numbers can occur. Earthquakes often happen in underdeveloped regions of the world that have little expertise to manage SCI in the best of times. Leading SCI organizations in the world such as the International Spinal Cord Society, American Spinal Injury Association, AOSpine, and the American Paraplegia Society can take the lead in improving the treatment of SCI in these regions in consultation with local governments and nongovernmental organizations.

  • It is important that experiences from previous disasters be shared, valuable lessons be learned, and shortcomings that are noticed be improved,Reference Rathore, Farooq, Muzammil, New, Ahmad and Haig5Reference Motamedi, Saghafinia, Bararani and Panahi10Reference de Ville de Goyet11 so that we are better prepared for the next disaster.

References

REFERENCES

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