Earthquake Resilience at District Level Hospital in Bangladesh: Tactic of Non- Structural Elements and Social Awareness

Author(s):  
Mohammad Mizanur Rahman ◽  
Abdullah Al Tariq ◽  
Sabrina Sharmin
BMJ Open ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. e019024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cindy Carol Bitter ◽  
Brian Rice ◽  
Usha Periyanayagam ◽  
Bradley Dreifuss ◽  
Heather Hammerstedt ◽  
...  

ObjectivesTo determine the most commonly used resources (provider procedural skills, medications, laboratory studies and imaging) needed to care for patients.SettingA single emergency department (ED) of a district-level hospital in rural Uganda.Participants26 710 patient visits.ResultsProcedures were performed for 65.6% of patients, predominantly intravenous cannulation, wound care, bladder catheterisation and orthopaedic procedures. Medications were administered to 87.6% of patients, most often pain medications, antibiotics, intravenous fluids, antimalarials, nutritional supplements and vaccinations. Laboratory testing was used for 85% of patients, predominantly malaria smears, rapid glucose testing, HIV assays, blood counts, urinalyses and blood type. Radiology testing was performed for 17.3% of patients, including X-rays, point-of-care ultrasound and formal ultrasound.ConclusionThis study describes the skills and resources needed to care for a large prospective cohort of patients seen in a district hospital ED in rural sub-Saharan Africa. It demonstrates that the vast majority of patients were treated with a small formulary of critical medications and limited access to laboratories and imaging, but providers require a broad set of decision-making and procedural skills.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (26) ◽  
pp. 2076-2080
Author(s):  
Ankit Agur ◽  
Narasimharao Thutari ◽  
Reddy K. J ◽  
Dikshit S. R. K

2021 ◽  
Vol 506 (1-2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nguyen Thi Thanh Huong ◽  
Dinh Xuan Dai

In health facilities, there is a lot of public concern about the irrational use of medications, especially antibiotic misuse. This retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted to assess the utilization of medicines for inpatients using ceftazidime in treatment in a district-level hospital in Vietnam, using 396 medical records. The results showed that there were approximately 6.7 kinds of drugs prescribed for each inpatient, including roughly 1.23 antibiotics. On average, 5.69 days of hospitalization cost an inpatient about 74.31USD, including more than 20USD for medicines (9.22USD for antibiotics) and 54.27USD for other expenses. There were 19.70% of medical records in which found at least one drug-drug interaction. Cardiovascular medicines, corticoids, fluoroquinolones and proton-pump inhibitors were medicine groups involving many found drug-drug interactions. For ceftazidime, indications of this antibiotic were inappropriate for nearly half of inpatients. For 199 inpatients whose indications’ ceftazidime were appropriate, the route of ceftazidime administration was appropriate but its dose per day and dose duration were inappropriate. More importantly, ceftazidime was used with a dosage lower than the recommended dosage (98.99%). In conclusion, there were several problems involving drug use that should be addressed, including curbing major drug-drug interactions and the irrational use of ceftazidime, a watch-group, broad-spectrum antibiotic.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document