| Literature DB >> 28781608 |
Frederick M Burkle1,2,3, Tom Potokar4, James E Gosney5, Cham Dallas6,7.
Abstract
Major challenges and crises in global health will not be solved by health alone; requiring rather a multidisciplinary, evidence-based analytical approach to prevention, preparedness and response. One such potential crisis is the continued spread of nuclear weapons to more nations concurrent with the increased volatility of international relations that has significantly escalated the risk of a major nuclear weapon exchange. This study argues for the development of a multidisciplinary global health response agenda based on the reality of the current political analysis of nuclear risk, research evidence suggesting higher-than-expected survivability risk, and the potential for improved health outcomes based on medical advances. To date, the medical consequences of such an exchange are not credibly addressed by any nation at this time, despite recent advances. While no one country could mount such a response, an international body of responders organized in the same fashion as the current World Health Organization's global health workforce initiative for large-scale natural and public health emergencies could enlist and train for just such an emergency. A Nuclear Global Health Workforce is described for addressing the unprecedented medical and public health needs to be expected in the event of a nuclear conflict or catastrophic accident. The example of addressing mass casualty nuclear thermal burns outlines the potential triage and clinical response management of survivors enabled by this global approach.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency medical teams; Global Health workforce; Nuclear thermal burns; Nuclear war; Triage; World Health Organization
Year: 2017 PMID: 28781608 PMCID: PMC5537978 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-017-0116-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Potential roles of EMT in aftermath of thermonuclear event
| Patient Category | Immediate Management | Where | Role of EMT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Superficial burns up to 30% TBSA | Oral resuscitation if over 15%, analgesia, dressings, availability of antibiotics | Ambulatory | Distribution and instruction in use of ‘individual emergency burn pack’ |
| Superficial burns over 30% TBSA and deep burns up to 40% TBSA | Oral resuscitation if over 15%, analgesia, dressings, availability of antibiotics PLUS early excision and grafting of deep burns | Field Hospital | Manage resuscitation, clean and dress wounds, early excision and grafting. |
| Deep burns over 40% TBSA | IV fluid resuscitation, analgesia dressings and transfer if possible | Transfer out of area to functioning specialist burns service | Confirm triage to ensure appropriate use of very limited transport and specialist services |
TBSA total body surface area