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Prehospital Lessons From the War in Ukraine: Damage Control Resuscitation and Surgery Experiences From Point of Injury to Role 2
J. Quinn, SI. Panasenko, Y. Leshchenko, K. Gumeniuk, A. Onderková, D. Stewart, AJ. Gimpelson, M. Buriachyk, M. Martinez, TA. Parnell, L. Brain, L. Sciulli, JB. Holcomb
Jazyk angličtina Země Anglie, Velká Británie
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
37647607
DOI
10.1093/milmed/usad253
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- antibakteriální látky MeSH
- hromadné neštěstí * MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- resuscitace MeSH
- třídění pacientů MeSH
- urgentní zdravotnické služby * MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Geografické názvy
- Ukrajina MeSH
The ongoing war in Ukraine presents unique challenges to prehospital medical care for wounded combatants and civilians. The purpose of this article is to identify, describe, and address gaps in prehospital care, casualty evacuation, and medical evacuation throughout Ukraine to share lessons for other providers. Observations and experiences of medical personnel were collected and analyzed, focusing on pain management, antibiotic use, patient assessment, mass casualty triage, blood loss, hypothermia, transport immobilization, and clinical governance. Gaps identified include limited access to pain management, lack of antibiotic guidance, inadequate patient assessment and triage, access to damage control resuscitation and blood, challenged transport immobilization practices, and challenges with clinical governance for both local and foreign providers. Improved prehospital care and casualty and medical evacuation in Ukraine are required, through increased use of empiric pain management, focused antibiotic guidance, enhanced patient assessment and triage in the form of training, access to prehospital blood, and better transport immobilization practices. A robust and active lessons learned program, trauma data capture, and quality improvement process is needed to reduce preventable morbidity and mortality in the war zone. The recommendations presented in this article serve as a starting point for improvements in prehospital care in Ukraine with potential to change prehospital training for the NATO alliance and other organizations operating in similar areas of conflict. Graphical Abstract.
Armed Forces of Ukraine 02000 Ukraine
Auton Lab Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
Department of Oncology Division of Surgery University College London Hospital London NW1 2BU UK
Department of Surgery No 3 Poltava State Medical University Poltava 36039 Ukraine
East Surrey Emergency Department Redhill RH1 5RH UK
Emergency and Deployed Medicine San Diego California USA
Faculty of Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver BC Canada
New England Health Solutions Manchester NH USA
NewYork Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital Emergency Department
Prague Center for Global Health Prague 120 00 Czech Republic
Shupyk National Healthcare University of Ukraine Ukraine
Ukrainian Armed Forces Headquarters of Medical Forces of Military Forces Kyiv 03168 Ukraine
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
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