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Recommendations on Medical Preparedness for Aeroplane and Airport Disasters*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2017

Extract

Every airport large and small should have a disaster plan to involve all rescue and medical services. (Jessen, Reich, Rørmark, Fahey, Bergot)

Communications between participants at a disaster must be of the highest caliber if patients are to receive optimal care. Communications between fixed operational bases should be by dedicated telephone (intercom lines) and radio on an appropriate frequency. Redundancy must be incorporated into the system. Education for personnel must be reinforced by regular drills. (Baker)

Disaster planning must take into account the fact that in many cases there will be survivors even from “hard impact” crashes taking place away from the airport. (Domres, Baker)

Regular disaster drills using actual aircraft and involving all agencies for disaster management, including physicians, must occur. (Fahey, Jessen, Star)

The principles of triage, field stabilization, and rational evacuation through an ambulance dispatch area must be incorporated into all plans. (Baker, Bergot, Fisher, Oyen)

In a major disaster triage is essential in order for medical help to be most effective. (DeSinnger, Oyen, Matthews.) Triage should be carried out by the most experienced person available. Casualties should be categorized into the following groups: 1) those dead or about to die; 2) those who will benefit from immediate resuscitation and treatment; 3) those who will benefit from treatment at any early stage; and 4) those who have trivial or no injuries.

Type
Section Five—Recommendations on Aeroplane Disasters
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 1985

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Footnotes

*

These recommendations evolved from the Second World Congress on Emergency and Disaster Medicine, June 1981, Pittsburgh PA, USA, and other meetings. Recommendations coordinated by P.J.F. Baskett, M.D. (Frenchay Hospital, Bristol BS161LE, England) in 1983.

For contributions by the authors listed in these recommendations, see this Journal issue, and Vol. 1, Supplement Dec. 1985 “Disaster Resuscitology”.

References

* These recommendations evolved from the Second World Congress on Emergency and Disaster Medicine, June 1981, Pittsburgh PA, USA, and other meetings. Recommendations coordinated by P.J.F. Baskett, M.D. (Frenchay Hospital, Bristol BS161LE, England) in 1983.

For contributions by the authors listed in these recommendations, see this Journal issue, and Vol. 1, Supplement Dec. 1985 “Disaster Resuscitology”.