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(A229) Financing Emergency and Disaster Treatment: A Proactive Funding Approach

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2011

E.K. Oladimeji
Affiliation:
Council, Lagos, Nigeria
B.O. Adebiyi
Affiliation:
Administration, Lagos, Nigeria
D. Akeredolu
Affiliation:
Lecturing, Lagos, Nigeria
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Abstract

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Financing the care and treatment of victims of emergencies and disasters is a critically important area for policy. It needs deliberations to evolve policies that will be relevant, robust and enduring. This is more so as the ideological and political leanings of a people determine what will be allowed and what policies endure. The sustainability of the funding model makes a large impact on the success of the treatment, in this case the specialized treatment needed in the traumatic event of emergency and disaster. The paper defined emergencies and disasters and observed that though the timing of funding is critical in the events, the volume and complexity of funding is higher in the latter. The paper reviewed the several current models in use today, particularly with locus on costs which should be incorporated in a payment model, including flag fall or set-up costs (for instance managing new patient records), consumables, investigations (such as pathology and diagnostic imaging) and pharmacological services (prescriptions, logistics of procurement under crisis, etc,) staffing costs which in public hospital emergency departments often do not vary within a shift i.e. emergency departments rarely draw staff from ward areas to the emergency departments to assist with unpredicted demand peaks- but which may become significant in event of disasters. These models are essentially public funded. The paper also highlighted the political underpinnings which make each of the current models popular in each of the ideological settings. The pros and cons associated with the models are reviewed in depth. The paper concludes, after the ideological/funding analysis, by recommending a private/public mix of funding. Details of this proactive funding approach are given and ways to modify and adapt them to different ideological (political) backgrounds suggested.

Type
Abstracts of Scientific and Invited Papers 17th World Congress for Disaster and Emergency Medicine
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2011