scholarly journals The Enhancement of First Aid Treatment for Medical Facilities

2020 ◽  
Vol 1529 ◽  
pp. 052098
Author(s):  
Nur Syahela Hussien ◽  
Adib Ismail Khafidz ◽  
Masyarah Zulhaida Masmuzidin
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Nur Syahela Hussien ◽  
Adib Ismail Khafidz ◽  
Masyarah Zulhaida Masmuzidin ◽  
Mahfuzah Mohaidin ◽  
Alia Amira Abd Rahman

BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. e042402
Author(s):  
Amrit Virk ◽  
Mohamed Bella Jalloh ◽  
Songor Koedoyoma ◽  
Isaac O Smalle ◽  
William Bolton ◽  
...  

IntroductionSurgical access is central to universalising health coverage, yet 5 billion people lack timely access to safe surgical services. Surgical need is particularly acute in post conflict settings like Sierra Leone. There is limited understanding of the barriers and opportunities at the service delivery and community levels. Focusing on fractures and wound care which constitute an enormous disease burden in Sierra Leone as a proxy for general surgical need, we examine provider and patient perceived factors impeding or facilitating surgical care in the post-Ebola context of a weakened health system.MethodsAcross Western Area Urban (Freetown), Bo and Tonkolili districts, 60 participants were involved in 38 semistructured interviews and 22 participants in 5 focus group discussions. Respondents included surgical providers, district-level policy-makers, traditional healers and patients. Data were thematically analysed, combining deductive and inductive techniques to generate codes.ResultsInteracting demand-side and supply-side issues affected user access to surgical services. On the demand side, high cost of care at medical facilities combined with the affordability and convenient mode of payment to the traditional health practitioners hindered access to the medical facilities. On the supply side, capacity shortages and staff motivation were challenges at facilities. Problems were compounded by patients’ delaying care mainly spurred by sociocultural beliefs in traditional practice and economic factors, thereby impeding early intervention for patients with surgical need. In the absence of formal support services, the onus of first aid and frontline trauma care is borne by lay citizens.ConclusionWithin a resource-constrained context, supply-side strengthening need accompanying by demand-side measures involving community and traditional actors. On the supply side, non-specialists could be effectively utilised in surgical delivery. Existing human resource capacity can be enhanced through better incentives for non-physicians. Traditional provider networks can be deployed for community outreach. Developing a lay responder system for first-aid and front-line support could be a useful mechanism for prompt clinical intervention.


Author(s):  
Hitesh Mohapatra

<p>In this paper, an offline drone instrumentalized ambulance (ODIA) mechanism has been discussed. The rapid increase in the urban population directly influences every sector of society. The sectors are maybe food, health care, education, transportation, etc. Normally, it has been observed that when any accidents happen on the urban road or any remote places then, the availability of immediate medical help is very rare. It is not because of the unaware or unavailability of medical facilities rather it happens because of overcrowding on the urban road and geographical odd-isolation of places. Hence, here an ODIA concept has been discussed which uses offline maps and offline first-aid medical videos through which immediate medical help can be made available at the patient end. This model helps to save the life of an accident victim by providing immediate medical attention. The key strength of ODIA is, it is independent of internet service that is why it is more suitable for harsh and hostile environments.</p>


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 478-478
Author(s):  
FELIX HEALD

This is a well written book with appropriate coverage of the major health problems commonly encountered in summer camps. The author demonstrates the dilemma that must be solved by each camp or camp physician. Either the camp dispensary or physician should be equipped to function as a first aid station on to function as an emergency room in a hospital. Part of the decision will have to be made on the local availability of proper medical facilities.


Author(s):  
Elena Damir

The organization of medical facilities in the USSR is able to provide adequate and rapid care, including intensive therapy in prehospital conditions for the whole population of a very big country. The principles of organization are very simple: the country is divided into regions and these into districts. Each district has to have a fixed number of hospital beds, stations for first aid and urgent care, and a determined number of physicians, and medical assistants (feldshers, nurses and others). The only difference between the emergency care in Moscow and Northern Siberia or Pamir is the distance to be travelled and the means of transport, i.e., modern first-aid cars, helicopters, planes or boats; or reindeer or dog teams when the weather makes aviation impossible. As a rule, all medical teams working in emergency medicine include physicians and medical assistants. Only in places where the population is very sparse are some emergencies still managed by only medical assistants at the pre-hospital stage.In cases of severe trauma we prefer, when possible, to have teams especially trained in shock treatment. These are already available in the emergency ambulance systems of the bigger towns. These so-called “shock-teams” are experienced and well equipped for intensive therapy at the accident site and with problems occurring during transport. When necessary, we are now able to transport critically ill or traumatized patients not only inside the hospital, but also from one hospital to another, when better intensive therapy can be obtained.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-71
Author(s):  
V. A. Shalamov ◽  

In mid-1918, the Siberian Commission of the American Red Cross was formed, headed by an American missionary doctor who worked in Japan, Rudolf Teusler. After Admiral Kolchak came to power, the Siberian Commission concluded an agreement to expand the scope of its activities, supply volumes, and payments. The main focus was on the front, which made the Red Cross akin to a White Army supply service, which was contrary to the principles of this organization. Americans drew attention to Eastern Siberia only in the summer of 1919, when Kolchak’s army retreated, and the incidence of typhus was rapidly growing in the rear regions. Two hospitals operated by the staff of the American Red Cross were opened in Irkutsk and Verkhneudinsk; gifts were distributed periodically in the form of first-aid items. At the end of 1919, in connection with the approach of the front line to Eastern Siberia, the Americans left the region, transferring medical facilities and supplies of medicines to local authorities. In early 1920, the Siberian Commission was given the opportunity to establish contacts with the Bolshevik authorities, which controlled territories west of Lake Baikal. Members of the commission began to prepare for a new humanitarian mission that would allow for the settlement of Soviet-American relations, return to the original tasks of the Red Cross, and help thousands of needy Siberians and refugees. However, the headquarters of the American Red Cross refused to authorize this activity and by mid-1920 evacuated the remaining personnel and cargo.


2005 ◽  
Vol 38 (16) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
MICHELE G. SULLIVAN
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 619-623 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginia Lewis ◽  
Tracey Varker ◽  
Andrea Phelps ◽  
Eve Gavel ◽  
David Forbes

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Watson ◽  
Melissa Brymer ◽  
Josef Ruzek ◽  
Alan Steinberg ◽  
Eric Vernberg ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document