Global health, global surgery and mass casualties: II. Mass casualty centre resources, equipment and implementation.
Sergio AguileraLeonidas QuintanaTariq KhanRoxanna GarciaHaitham ShomanLuke CaddellRifat LatifiKee B ParkPatricia GarciaRobert DempseyJeffrey V RosenfeldCorey ScurlockNigel CrispLubna SamadMontray SmithLaura LippaRashid JoomaRussell J AndrewsPublished in: BMJ global health (2020)
Trauma/stroke centres optimise acute 24/7/365 surgical/critical care in high-income countries (HICs). Concepts from low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) offer additional cost-effective healthcare strategies for limited-resource settings when combined with the trauma/stroke centre concept. Mass casualty centres (MCCs) integrate resources for both routine and emergency care-from prevention to acute care to rehabilitation. Integration of the various healthcare systems-governmental, non-governmental and military-is key to avoid both duplication and gaps. With input from LMIC and HIC personnel of various backgrounds-trauma and subspecialty surgery, nursing, information technology and telemedicine, and healthcare administration-creative solutions to the challenges of expanding care (both daily and disaster) are developed. MCCs are evolving initially in Chile and Pakistan. Technologies for cost-effective healthcare in LMICs include smartphone apps (enhance prehospital care) to electronic data collection and analysis (quality improvement) to telemedicine and drones/robots (support of remote regions and resource optimisation during both daily care and disasters) to resilient, mobile medical/surgical facilities (eg, battery-operated CT scanners). The co-ordination of personnel (within LMICs, and between LMICs and HICs) and the integration of cost-effective advanced technology are features of MCCs. Providing quality, cost-effective care 24/7/365 to the 5 billion who lack it presently makes MCCs an appealing means to achieve the healthcare-related United Nations Sustainable Development Goals for 2030.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- global health
- acute care
- minimally invasive
- physical activity
- palliative care
- health information
- patient safety
- atrial fibrillation
- emergency department
- affordable care act
- coronary artery bypass
- cardiac arrest
- acute coronary syndrome
- primary care
- social media
- coronary artery disease
- artificial intelligence
- positron emission tomography
- liver failure
- big data
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- health insurance
- posttraumatic stress disorder
- data analysis