medical planning
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

236
(FIVE YEARS 16)

H-INDEX

12
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
pp. bmjmilitary-2021-001911
Author(s):  
Stacey Webster ◽  
A Gough ◽  
M R Riley ◽  
S Makin

Operation TORAL was the UK’s contribution to NATO’s Operation RESOLUTE SUPPORT in Kabul, Afghanistan. Approximately 1000 British troops were deployed in Kabul when the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic in Afghanistan was declared. This article will describe the challenges faced due to COVID-19 in Kabul.Medical planning considerations, occupational health issues, implementation of behaviour change and operating as part of a multinational organisation are all discussed, with challenges encountered detailed and potential solutions offered. The use of a suggested framework for ensuring the medical estimate process covered all areas relevant to an emerging viral pandemic —the 4Ds and 4Cs approach—proved particularly useful in the early stages of the pandemic in Afghanistan.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-132
Author(s):  
Philipp Sembdner ◽  
Bernhard Bust ◽  
Lars Dornheim ◽  
Stefan Holtzhausen ◽  
Ralph Stelzer

Abstract The paper introduces a method for the automated generation of patient-specific instruments (PSI), here in particular templates, for the implantation of customized implants. The basis is the derivation of data from the morphology of the bony situation and the medical planning. A developed methodological approach based on an Active Shape Model (ASM) is used for the morphological measurement. Determined geometric dimensions are placed on this ASM and automatically adjusted in each case. In addition, specially developed software tools for the planning and design of medical devices will be presented. This includes, among other things, the intuitive control of template parameters by the user when manual adjustments are necessary. The determined data is bundled and applied to previously methodically thought-out and categorized master CAD (Computer Aided Design) models of surgical templates. These master models are fully configurable and designed to be adjusted within defined ranges of values. The templates are printed from the biocompatible material PA12 using selective laser sintering (SLS).


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 8016-8028
Author(s):  
Abdelhakem Belaghit ◽  
B. Aour ◽  
M. Larabi ◽  
A. A. Tadjeddine ◽  
S. Mebarki

The descending aortic aneurysm is one of the most catastrophic cardiovascular emergencies resulting in high mortality worldwide. Clinical observations have pointed out that stent implantation in the sick aorta should probably allow stabilization of the hemodynamic state of the patient's aorta. To better understand the hemodynamic impact of a stent-treated aneurysm, numerical simulations are used to evaluate hemodynamic parameters. These latter including flow profile, velocity distribution, aortic wall pressure and shear stress, which are difficult to measure in vivo. It should be noted that the numerical modeling assists in medical planning by providing patterns of blood circulation, in particular, the distribution of pressures and shear stresses in the wall. In this context, the pulsatile blood flow in the aneurysmal aorta with stent is studied by CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) simulations. Realistic boundary conditions time dependent are prescribed at the level of the different arteries of the complete aorta models. The hemodynamic profile of the aneurysmal aorta with stent was analyzed by contour planes of velocity vectors, pressures and shear stresses at different times during the cardiac cycle. The obtained results made it possible to show the effect of the stent on the improvement of the blood flow by solving the problems of hemodynamic disturbances in the aorta.  The methodology used in this work has revealed detailed and necessary information for the cases studied and shows the interest of the numerical tool for diagnosis and surgery.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
André Luiz Luiz Jardini ◽  
Éder Sócrates Sócrates Najar Lopes ◽  
Laís Pellizzer Gabriel ◽  
Davi Calderoni ◽  
Rubens Maciel Filho ◽  
...  

Purpose This study aims to assess the design, manufacturing and surgical implantation of three-dimensional (3D) customized implants, including surgical preoperative planning, surgery and postoperative results, for cranioplasty along with zygomatic and orbital floor implants using additive manufacturing (AM) technics for a 23-year-old female who suffered from severe craniomaxillofacial trauma. Design/methodology/approach The skull biomodel was produced in polyamide while implants were made of a Ti-6Al-4V alloy by AM. Findings The method enabled perfectly fitting implants and anatomical conformance with the craniomaxillofacial defect, providing complete healing for the patient. Surgical planning using a customized 3D polyamide biomodel was effective. This proved to be a powerful tool for medical planning and manufacturing of customized implants, as complete healing and good craniofacial aesthetic results were observed. Originality/value Satisfactory surgical procedures, regarding surgery time reduction and good craniofacial aesthetic results, were achieved. Furthermore, the 3D titanium customized implants represented a favorable alternate for the repair of craniomaxillofacial defects.


2021 ◽  
pp. bmjmilitary-2020-001693
Author(s):  
James Ralph ◽  
E J Hutley ◽  
G Nordmann

The deployment of a UK military Role 2 Medical Treatment Facility (MTF) to South Sudan during Operation TRENTON into an isolated location and austere environment with a prolonged hold produced potential medical planning challenges. The MTF was augmented with both specific personnel and equipment in order to meet these challenges. This paper discusses equipment available in this facility not previously used at Role 2 before and how it could be used to supplement medical operational deployments in future.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frcs Ramc Breeze ◽  
William Gensheimer ◽  
Craig Berg ◽  
Kathleen M Sarber

ABSTRACT Introduction Previous analyses of head, face, and neck (HFN) surgery in the deployed military setting have focused on the treatment of injuries using trauma databases. Little has been written on the burden of disease and the requirement for follow-up care. The aim of this analysis was to provide the most comprehensive overview of surgical workload in a contemporary role 3 MTF to facilitate future planning. Method The operating room database and specialty surgical logbooks from a U.S.-led role 3 MTF in Afghanistan were analyzed over a 5-year period (2016-2020). These were then matched to the deployed surgical TC2 database to identify reasons for treatment and a return to theatre rate. Operative records were finally matched to the deployed Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application-Theater outpatient database to determine follow up frequency. Results During this period, surgical treatment to the HFN represented 389/1989 (19.6%) of all operations performed. Surgery to the HFN was most commonly performed for battle injury (299/385, 77.6%) followed by disease (63/385, 16%). The incidence of battle injury-related HFN cases varied markedly across each year, with 117/299 (39.1%) being treated in the three summer months (June to August). The burden of disease, particularly to the facial region, remained constant throughout the period analyzed (mean of 1 case per month). Conclusions Medical planning of the surgical requirements to treat HFN pathology is primarily focused on battle injury of coalition service personnel. This analysis has demonstrated that the treatment of disease represented 16% of all HFN surgical activities. The presence of multiple HFN sub-specialty surgeons prevented the requirement for multiple aeromedical evacuations of coalition service personnel which may have affected mission effectiveness as well as incurring a large financial burden. The very low volume of surgical activity demonstrated during certain periods of this analysis may have implications for the maintenance of surgical competencies for subspecialty surgeons.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Emran Hajmohammadi ◽  
Samira Najirad ◽  
Hesam Mikaeili ◽  
Aziz Kamran

Background. Supernumerary tooth is defined as any extra tooth or odontogenic structure that is formed on normal dentition. Supernumerary teeth cause such problems as deficiency in tooth growth, ectopic growth, displacement, crowding, diastema, odontogenic cyst formation, decay of the adjacent tooth, malocclusion, and esthetic problems. This study was conducted aiming at determining epidemiology of supernumerary teeth in Ardabil city in 2020. Materials & Methods. In this retrospective descriptive analytical study, 5000 panoramic radiographs of patients referring to Rad and Baser Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology Centers were selected through multistage sampling method during 2015–2020. The data were collected by checklist and analyzed with using SPSS-21 and chi-squared, Fisher, and one-way ANOVA tests with a significance level less than 5%. Results. The prevalence of supernumerary teeth was estimated as 1.06% (n = 53), and no significant difference between the males and females was seen. Most supernumerary teeth were found in the distomolar (44.1%) and parapremolar (29.4%) locations. The majority of supernumerary teeth were present in the maxilla (73.5%) and were impacted (77.9%) and unilateral (71.7%). The number of supernumerary teeth was 68 cases and majority of patients (86.8%) had one supernumerary tooth. Conclusion. Supernumerary tooth in this study had a high prevalence compared to similar studies, and unlike most previous studies, the most common type of supernumerary tooth was distomolar. Early diagnosis and proper medical planning are essential for managing supernumerary teeth.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 617-622
Author(s):  
Lauren V Fortington ◽  
Sheree Bekker ◽  
Caroline F Finch

IntroductionA voluntary State Government-led programme in Victoria, Australia ‘Defibrillators for Sporting Clubs and Facilities Program’ ran from 2015 to 2019, broadly aimed at increasing access to automated external defibrillators (AEDs), together with a greater number of community members trained for management of medical emergencies. This study aimed to understand whether participating sport clubs/facilities had successfully integrated an AED and medical planning with other club/facility safety practices, 12 months after delivery of the programme.MethodsThis was a qualitative case study of 14 sport clubs/facilities in Victoria, Australia in 2017, underpinned by the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework. We conducted observational audits of facilities (to locate AED placement, signage and other relevant location-specific factors) and semi-structured, face-to-face interviews with representatives of the clubs/facilities. Interview questions were designed to determine if and how the related, mandated emergency management programme was adapted for the long term (embedding), whether this aligned to ongoing organisational mission (active engagement), and whether or not it was still ongoing 6 months postinitial implementation (sustainability). Data were evaluated using qualitative descriptive methodology. For reporting, descriptive summaries of the audit were combined with interview data to contextualise and visualise the sport club/facility setting and key results.ResultsKey issues identified were accessibility and visibility of the AED, with inadequate signage and challenges identifying an efficient location for access and storage. Most interviewees reported the AED and training were received with no further actions taken towards safety planning or integration with club/facility practice. Several challenges regarding remaining up to date with training and ensuring required routine checks of the AED take place were also raised.ConclusionsThis study identified several challenges for community sport clubs/facilities in the implementation of an AED and medical planning programme, including where to store the AED, how to make its presence known to the community and how to integrate changes alongside other club/facility practices.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e19261-e19261
Author(s):  
Marcos Costa ◽  
Carlos Henrique Teixeira ◽  
Renata Peixoto ◽  
Waldec Jorge ◽  
Felipe Ades ◽  
...  

e19261 Background: MDTB have emerged as a valuable forum to address questions related to patient management. There is a general data lack of its overall benefit by attending physicians. However, few reports describe numerical impact on patient care of this tailor-made and shared model of medical decision. Methods: We describe, in this prospectively-collected study, data from a Cancer Center (HAOC) regarding multiple weekly, 1h-long discussions, as part of MDTB (GU, neuro-oncology GI, thorax, HN, breast, gyneco, melanoma/sarcoma and palliative care). Only newly-diagnosed or on-treatment challenging cancer cases were included. Attendees (onco, surgeons, RT, paths and radiologists) pooled their expertise to warrant quality and maximize resources. The primary endpoint was change in the medical planning. In our institution, further adherence to MDTB recommendations are left totally at physician discretion. Results: From Oct/17 to Feb/19, 413 cases were discussed (60% female), mean of 2.9 cases/MDTB, but GI (3.8), thorax (3.7) and breast (2.94) were above the median. Mean was 13.4 doctors/MDTB - more in breast (16.5), GI (15.8) and uro (15.1). Mean of oncologist/MDTB in general was 6.1, but 8.1 in GI, 7.8 thorax, breast 6.8 and 6.7 uro. Mean of surgeons/MDTB in general was 3.5, but 6.2 in breast, 5.8 uro and 5.5 GI. 100% of all had at least 1 oncologist and uro/GI/breast had at least 1 surgeon in 100% of them. In 50% (uro), 44% (neuro), 23.5% (breast), 6.4% (thorax) and 3.7% (GI) had at least 1 physician of 5 major areas. Oncologists engaged with more cases: 80.4% (thorax), 70.6% (uro), 59.6% (GI), 56.5% (HN). Prostate (38.2%), metastasis (neuro, 28.9%), colorectal (18.2%), lung adenoCA (43.5%), mouth (30.4%), ductal carcinoma (35.8%) were the more frequently discussed per system. In 25.7%, MDTB changed original medical planning. By site: GI (35,6%), thorax (24,7%), breast (22,6%), neuro (21,7%), uro (17,7%) and HN (17,4%). Oncologists were responsible more in thorax (73,9%) and less in breast (33%) and surgeons more in breast (50%) and less in GI (33%). Adherence to NCCN guidelines was total. Finally, but not measurable, a sizeable number of cases requires significant weekly time-effort. Conclusions: This study confirms MDTB leading role in cancer care, highlighting the importance of teamwork for more precise patient care. We point out that it led to substantial practice-changing in our institution, reinforcing its importance in a scenario which doctors are confronted with increasing complexities in patient management.


2020 ◽  
Vol 166 (6) ◽  
pp. 387-390
Author(s):  
L G Davies ◽  
D C Thompson ◽  
R Gillett ◽  
M B Smith

IntroductionModule 501 provides core medications which are fundamental to the capability of a prehospital treatment team (PHTT). The quantities of each medication in the module inventory undergo regular review, but these do not correspond to a population at risk (PAR) figure or deployment length for which they intend to be used. This article proposes how the quantities of Module 501 drugs can be scaled for a given deployment, in this example using statistics taken from static PHTTs on Exercise Saif Sareea 3 (SS3).MethodsThe statistics were gathered using a custom-built search of electronic records from the Deployed Defence Medical Information Capability Programme in addition to written record-keeping, which were aligned to the weekly PAR at each PHTT location throughout their full operational capability periods. A quotient was then derived for each module item using a formula.ResultsAmong the 10 most commonly prescribed drugs were four analgesics and three antimicrobials. 42 of the 110 studied drugs were not prescribed during SS3.DiscussionThe data from SS3 reflect the typical scope of disease encountered in the deployed land setting. Employing these data, the use of a formula to estimate the drug quantities needed to sustain a Strike Armoured Infantry Brigade over a 28-day period is demonstrated.RecommendationsFurther study of Module 501 across varied deployment environments would be valuable in evolving this approach to medicinal scaling if proven effective for the warm desert climate. It could then be applied to other modules to further inform future Strike medical planning.LimitationsSeveral considerations when drawing deductions from the data are mentioned, including the inaccuracy of predictor variables taken from the EpiNATO-2 reports.ConclusionThe proposed formula provides an evidence-based framework for scaling drug quantities for a deployment planning. This may improve patient safety and confer logistical, storage and fiscal benefits.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document