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An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala

Background & Objectives: Major incidents occur commonly in Uganda, but little is known about either local hazards which risk causing major incidents, or health system preparedness for such events. Understanding risk and current preparedness is the first step in improving response. Methods: We under...

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Main Author: Kalanzi, Joseph
Other Authors: Smith, Wayne
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kalanzi, Joseph
author2 Smith, Wayne
author_browse Kalanzi, Joseph
Smith, Wayne
author_facet Smith, Wayne
Kalanzi, Joseph
author_sort Kalanzi, Joseph
collection Thesis
description Background & Objectives: Major incidents occur commonly in Uganda, but little is known about either local hazards which risk causing major incidents, or health system preparedness for such events. Understanding risk and current preparedness is the first step in improving response. Methods: We undertook a cross - sectional study across four teaching hospitals in Kampala (Mulago National Referral Hospital, Nsambya Hospital, Mengo Hospital and Lubaga Hospital). A local geographic area Hazard Vulnerability Analysis (HVA) f or each site was combined with a key informant questionnaire and standardized facility checklist within the hospitals. Data collected included status of major incident committees, operational major incident plans and facility major incident operation centres, bed capacity, equipment and supplies and staffing. The HVA assessed the human impact, impact on property and on business of the hazards as well as measures for mitigation (preparedness, internal response and external response) in place at the hospitals. Results: Only one of the four hospitals was found to have had an operational major incident plan. The designated coordinator for major incidents across all facilities was mostly a general surgeon; no funds were specifically allocated for planning .All hospitals have procedures for triage, resuscitation, stabilization and treatment. None of the facilities had officially designated a major incident committee. All the facilities had sufficient supplies for daily use but none had specifically stock piled any reserves for major incidents. All hospitals were staffed by at least a medical officer, clinical officers, nurses and a specialist with procedures for mobilizing extra staff s for major incidents. Some staffs had received some emergency care training in courses namely basic life support, advanced trauma life support, primary trauma care and emergency triage and treatment but no team had received training in major incident response. Only one hospital carried out annual simulation exercises. Incidents involving human hazards specifically bomb threats, road crash mass casualty incidents, civil disorder and epidemics posed the highest risk to all four hospitals and yet preparation and response measures were inadequate. Conclusion: Hospitals in Kampala face a wide range of hazards and frequent major incidents but despite this they remain under - prepared to respond. Large gaps were identified in as far as staffing, equipment and infrastructure.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:41.113Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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publisher Division of Emergency Medicine
publisherStr Division of Emergency Medicine
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/21188 An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala Kalanzi, Joseph Smith, Wayne Wallis, Lee Emergency medicine Background & Objectives: Major incidents occur commonly in Uganda, but little is known about either local hazards which risk causing major incidents, or health system preparedness for such events. Understanding risk and current preparedness is the first step in improving response. Methods: We undertook a cross - sectional study across four teaching hospitals in Kampala (Mulago National Referral Hospital, Nsambya Hospital, Mengo Hospital and Lubaga Hospital). A local geographic area Hazard Vulnerability Analysis (HVA) f or each site was combined with a key informant questionnaire and standardized facility checklist within the hospitals. Data collected included status of major incident committees, operational major incident plans and facility major incident operation centres, bed capacity, equipment and supplies and staffing. The HVA assessed the human impact, impact on property and on business of the hazards as well as measures for mitigation (preparedness, internal response and external response) in place at the hospitals. Results: Only one of the four hospitals was found to have had an operational major incident plan. The designated coordinator for major incidents across all facilities was mostly a general surgeon; no funds were specifically allocated for planning .All hospitals have procedures for triage, resuscitation, stabilization and treatment. None of the facilities had officially designated a major incident committee. All the facilities had sufficient supplies for daily use but none had specifically stock piled any reserves for major incidents. All hospitals were staffed by at least a medical officer, clinical officers, nurses and a specialist with procedures for mobilizing extra staff s for major incidents. Some staffs had received some emergency care training in courses namely basic life support, advanced trauma life support, primary trauma care and emergency triage and treatment but no team had received training in major incident response. Only one hospital carried out annual simulation exercises. Incidents involving human hazards specifically bomb threats, road crash mass casualty incidents, civil disorder and epidemics posed the highest risk to all four hospitals and yet preparation and response measures were inadequate. Conclusion: Hospitals in Kampala face a wide range of hazards and frequent major incidents but despite this they remain under - prepared to respond. Large gaps were identified in as far as staffing, equipment and infrastructure. 2016-08-11T10:17:26Z 2016-08-11T10:17:26Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Med) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21188 eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Emergency medicine
Kalanzi, Joseph
An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
title_full An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
title_fullStr An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
title_short An analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in Kampala
title_sort analysis of health facility preparedness for major incidents in kampala
topic Emergency medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21188
work_keys_str_mv AT kalanzijoseph ananalysisofhealthfacilitypreparednessformajorincidentsinkampala
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