| Literature DB >> 34754760 |
Sudha Jayaraman1,2, Faustin Ntirenganya3, Menelas Nkeshimana4, Ashley Rosenberg1, Theophile Dushime5, Ignace Kabagema5, Jean Marie Uwitonze5, Eric Uwitonize5, Jeanne d'Arc Nyinawankusi5, Robert Riviello6, Irene Bagahirwa7, Kenneth L Williams1, Elizabeth Krebs8, Rebecca Maine9, Paulin Banguti10, Stephen Rulisa11,12, Patrick Kyamanywa13, Jean Claude Byiringiro12.
Abstract
Background: Surgical capacity building has gained substantial momentum. However, care at the hospital level depends on improved access to emergency services. There is no established model for facilitating trauma and EMS system capacity in LMIC settings. This manuscript describes our model for multi-disciplinary collaboration to advance trauma and EMS capacity in Rwanda, along with our lessons and recommendations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34754760 PMCID: PMC8555476 DOI: 10.5334/aogh.3324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Glob Health ISSN: 2214-9996 Impact factor: 2.462
Activities Supporting Trauma & EMS Capacity in Rwanda.
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| THEMES AND PROJECTS | ACTIVITIES | FUNDING | SUCCESSES | CHALLENGES |
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| Leadership | Immersion in EMS, emergency medicine, trauma care, cardiac emergency care, critical care, hospital admin at VCU, state EMS systems at Virginia Department of Health Office of EMS, EMS field organization at Richmond Ambulance Authority | VCU-Crone Scholars Program; Philanthropy; VCU SOM | 7 Leaders from EMS, EM, Injury Policy, MOH; 15 weeks; presentations at VCU, Virginia EMS Symposium, EMS World Expo | Retention of these leaders in Rwanda long enough to develop and implement their shared vision-> continued mentorship and support through ongoing collaboration |
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| Advocacy | First Rwanda National Trauma Symposium | NIH NCI P20; VCU SOM | over 100 participants; results published | Potential to be one-off without ongoing momentum and support-> regular meetings to be led by RBC in partnership with stakeholders |
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| Prehospital and Emergency Training Courses | 4 Prehospital/Emergency Courses through train-the-trainers program for trauma, medical, pediatric, and obstetric/neonatal emergencies; Educator course for Instructor core | Rotary Foundation Global Grant | 25 Instructors; > 600 trained doctors, nurses, anesthetists, midwives from provincial and district hospitals; 4 manuscripts submitted; EMS Manual for LMICs in progress | Wide scale-up and periodic refresher training needs further funding-> to be incorporated into annual SAMU outreach budget |
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| Standardization of EMS Care through Protocols and Checklists | 42 protocols and checklists created, implemented as national prehospital standard for SAMU | NIH Fogarty R21 | Checklist implementation being evaluated for 6 index conditions currently | Regular QI processes to maintain quality-> support through ongoing collaboration |
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| QI and Research Capacity | Short mentored research program – 4 teams; Masters’ degrees support for nurses, anesthetists, doctors from SAMU and CHUK | NIH Fogarty R21; VCU SOM | Presentations at African Congress on Emergency Medicine and College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa; 11 staff completing Masters’ degrees | Regular research projects by SAMU -> support through ongoing collaboration |
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| Data Infrastructure – Prehospital Registry | REDCap prehospital registry 2013–2018, | Harvard Postgraduate Fellowship/AAS Global Surgery Fellowship | >15,000 prehospital records captured | Ongoing use and maintenance -> led by SAMU staff |
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| Data Infrastructure – Multi-Institutional Hospital-Based Trauma Registry | WHO Trauma registry adopted, customized, and implemented across 4 Referral hospitals in Rwanda | NIH NCI P20 | >5000 trauma patient records captured in initial 12 months | Ongoing use and maintenance -> led by RBC and hospital staff with ongoing support from WHO |
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| Emergency Communication Systems and Innovation | Private-Academic-Government collaboration with Rwanda Build; Concept design for Rwanda912 mobile health platform for emergency communications and coordination selected top 5 finalists at Toyota Mobility Ideathon and Smart Kigali Competition in 2018 | VCU SOM; NIH Fogarty R21; Toyota Finalist Award; Smart Kigali Finalist | Formal Engagement from MOH; Application submitted to NIH for software development and implementation research | Funding to develop and implement -> in progress |
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AAS – Association for Academic Surgery, EM – Emergency Medicine, EMS – Emergency Medical Services, MOH – Ministry of Health of Rwanda, NIH – National Institutions of Health, NCI – National Cancer Institute, QI – Quality Improvement, VCU SOM – Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine.