Literature DB >> 16128474

Lessons learned from cross-border medical response to the terrorist bombings in Tabba and Ras-el-Satan, Egypt, on 07 October 2004.

Adi Leiba1, Amir Blumenfeld, Ariel Hourvitz, Gali Weiss, Michal Peres, Dani Laor, Dagan Schwartz, Jacob Arad, Avishay Goldberg, Yeheskel Levi, Yaron Bar-Dayan.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Large-scale, terrorist attacks can happen in peripheral areas, which are located close to a country's borders and far from its main medical facilities and involve multi-national casualties and responders. The objective of this study was to analyze the terrorist suicide bombings that occurred on 07 October 2004, near the Israeli-Egyptian border, as representative of such a complex scenario.
METHODS: Data from formal debriefings after the event were processed in order to learn about victim outcomes, resource utilization, critical events, and time course of the emergency response.
RESULTS: A total of 185 injured survivors were repatriated: four were severely wounded, 13 were moderately injured, and 168 were mildly injured. Thirty-eight people died. A forward medical team landed at the border town's airport, which provided reinforcement in the field and in the local hospital. Israeli and Egyptian search and rescue teams collaborated at the destruction site. One-hundred sixty-eight injured patients arrived at the small border hospital that rapidly organized itself for the mass-casualty incident, operating as an evacuation "staging hospital". Twenty-three casualties secondarily were distributed to two major trauma centers in the south and the center of Israel, respectively, either by ambulance or by helicopter.
CONCLUSION: Large-scale, terrorist attacks at a peripheral border zone can be handled by international collaboration, reinforcement of medical teams at the site itself and at the peripheral neighboring hospital, rapid rearrangement of an "evacuation hospital", and efficient transport to trauma centers by ambulances, helicopters, and other aircraft.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16128474     DOI: 10.1017/s1049023x00002624

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prehosp Disaster Med        ISSN: 1049-023X            Impact factor:   2.040


  4 in total

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Authors:  Christopher N Mills; Gregory H Mills
Journal:  West J Emerg Med       Date:  2011-02

Review 2.  Utilisation of helicopter emergency medical services in the early medical response to major incidents: a systematic literature review.

Authors:  Anne Siri Johnsen; Sabina Fattah; Stephen J M Sollid; Marius Rehn
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2016-02-09       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  Helicopter emergency medical services in major incident management: A national Norwegian cross-sectional survey.

Authors:  Anne Siri Johnsen; Stephen J M Sollid; Trond Vigerust; Morten Jystad; Marius Rehn
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-02-13       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Utstein-style template for uniform data reporting of acute medical response in disasters.

Authors:  Michel Debacker; Ives Hubloue; Erwin Dhondt; Gerald Rockenschaub; Anders Rüter; Tudor Codreanu; Kristi L Koenig; Carl Schultz; Kobi Peleg; Pinchas Halpern; Samuel Stratton; Francesco Della Corte; Herman Delooz; Pier Luigi Ingrassia; Davide Colombo; Maaret Castrèn
Journal:  PLoS Curr       Date:  2012-03-23
  4 in total

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