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Medics, Mercenaries and Miscreants — A review of Canadian Medical Assistance Teams' EMT Type 1 response to the conflict in Ukraine
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
Abstract
On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine, resulting in Europe’s largest refugee crisis since World War II. More than six million Ukrainians fled the country—half of these to Poland—and one-third of the population was internally displaced.
Border points became bottlenecks where fatalities were reported—people risked their lives in long queues and subzero temperatures.
This presentation focuses on experiential information obtained during a 17-week deployment of EMT Type 1 both at border points (fixed) and in northwestern Ukraine (mobile). Quantitative and qualitative data were obtained after deployment by online survey with 75 medical, logistical and interpreter volunteers.
Initial teams experienced extremely fluid demands and numerous challenges with security, team adherence to COVID-19 protocols, behavioral issues with less experienced volunteers, and collaboration with novel governmental and non-governmental partners to achieve objectives.
1. Deployment to a conflict setting requires adherence to the Incident Command System, with daily security briefings and structured handover between teams at the beginning of each deployment.
2. Strict adherence to well-defined protocols for the prevention and management of emerging infectious risks such as COVID-19 is necessary, along with contingency plans to isolate infected team members.
3. There is a need for standardized pre-deployment vetting, training and orientation of all volunteers—particularly team leaders.
4. Identification of international partners should start pre-deployment and remain a continuous process during deployment.
- Type
- Lightning and Oral Presentations
- Information
- Prehospital and Disaster Medicine , Volume 38 , Supplement S1: 22nd Congress on Disaster and Emergency Medicine , May 2023 , pp. s37
- Copyright
- © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine