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International EMT-Operational Plan–ODESA Escalation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

Jiro Oba
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency & Critical Care Medicine, Nerima Hospital, Juntendo University, Nerima, Indonesia
Tatsuhiko Kubo
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health and Health, Hiroshima University, Tokyo, Indonesia
Yoshiki Toyokuni
Affiliation:
Japan Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT), Tokyo, Indonesia
Tomoki Nakamori
Affiliation:
Yokohama Rosai Hospital, Tokyo, Indonesia
Yukiko Habano
Affiliation:
Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Tokyo, Indonesia
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Since February 24, 2022, at the time of writing this plan, approximately 400,000+ refugees had entered Moldova and 282,842 had exited Moldova. EMTCC will need to coordinate international medical teams assisting with the increasing refugee numbers crossing into Moldova from southern Ukraine for the MOH and international EMT’s in support of trauma management in Palanca and related borders and referral to health care facilities within Moldova.

Method:

This EMTCC operational plan sets objectives and explores trigger points that require actions in the context of International EMT’s, two service levels were trauma triage/stabilization and primary health care.

Results:

Odesa was a city located approximately 60 kilometers from the Moldova border crossing of Palanca. Trauma patients reaching the Palanca border would need to be identified in vehicular columns by roving triage teams (EMT 1 M) and expedited through the border. Survivability of severe trauma patients proceeding through the border crossing and expected to transit through to tertiary level care would be low without the intervention of trauma stabilization teams (damage control). The initial positioning of at least 2 trauma stabilization points would require the support, skills, logistics and self sustainability of classified EMT’s or similar. These would also need the additional support of specialized trauma/surgical cells at both Stefan Voda and Causeni Hospitals.

Conclusion:

Odessa escalation should have been the worst scenario, but we were able to work with MOH in Moldova to develop a plan to save more lives for trauma patients reaching the Palanca border.

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine