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(A238) Optimizing Medical Response to Large-Scale Disasters: The Ad Hoc Collaborative Healthcare System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2011

K. Peleg
Affiliation:
Israel National Center for Trauma and Emergency Medicine, Ramat Gan, Israel
A. Lipski
Affiliation:
Israel National Center for Trauma and Emergency Medicine, Ramat Gan, Israel
Y. Kreiss
Affiliation:
Tel- Hashomer, Israel
N. Ash
Affiliation:
Tel- Hashomer, Israel
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Abstract

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During the authors' recent experience in Haiti during the early aftermath of a major earthquake, it was discovered that more optimal use of field hospitals could be achieved through increased coordination across the deployed medical resources. Moreover, if it were possible to standardize both the capabilities of these resources and their inter-operational guidelines, further improvement in resource utilization could be achieved. Resolving the bottleneck particularly was crucial as the impact on mortality that specialized field hospitals may affect in disasters is observed primarily early on. Confronted with tremendous need in the face of massive devastation, a solution was improvised: For every patient requiring a higher level of care sent by a light hospital, it would have to take a patient being cared for by the authors' in exchange. This arrangement allowed the admission patients who had been screened by other health professionals as requiring an acute intervention that the authors were in a unique position to provide, and ensured that patients would remain under medical care until they were stable enough to be discharged. Additionally, senior medical staff to light hospitals to help identify which patients would most likely benefit from being transferred to the authors' facility. With the other hospital teams' cooperation, surgeons performed needed morbidity and mortality reducing operations on more patients than would have otherwise been possible. Implementing a collaborative healthcare system would help achieve more optimal use of all the medical resources available in a disaster. Further optimization could likely be achieved if participating countries and organizations adhered to a standardized classification and coordination system. Both levels of coordination, at the preparatory and deployment stages, would likely lead to decreased mortality, morbidity, and disability among the devastated population.

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