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The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers

Introduction: Injury and violence is a neglected global health problem, despite being largely predictable and therefor preventable. This study aimed to indirectly describe and compare the availability of resources to manage major trauma between high income, and low- to middle-income countries, as se...

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Main Author: Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
Other Authors: Bruijns, Stevan R
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
author2 Bruijns, Stevan R
author_browse Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
Bruijns, Stevan R
author_facet Bruijns, Stevan R
Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
author_sort Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
collection Thesis
description Introduction: Injury and violence is a neglected global health problem, despite being largely predictable and therefor preventable. This study aimed to indirectly describe and compare the availability of resources to manage major trauma between high income, and low- to middle-income countries, as self-reported by delegates at the 2016 International Conference on Emergency Medicine held in Cape Town, South Africa. Materials and methods: A survey was distributed to delegates at the International Conference on Emergency Medicine 2016, Cape Town to achieve the study aim. The survey instrument was based on the 2016 NICE guidelines for the management of patients with major trauma. It captured responses from participants working in both pre- and in hospital settings. Responses were grouped according to income group (either high income, or low- to middle-income) based on the responding delegate’s nationality (using the World Bank definition for income group). A Fisher’s Exact test was conducted to compare delegate responses Results: The survey was distributed and opened by 980 delegates, of whom 392 (40%) responded. A total of 206 (53%) respondents were from high-income countries and 186 (47%) were from low- to middle-income countries. Responders of this self-reported survey described a significant discrepancy between the resources and services available to high income countries s and low- to middle-income countries to adequately care for major trauma patients both pre- and in-hospital. Shortages ranged from consumables to analgesia, imaging to specialist services, pre-hospital to in-hospital. Discussion: Resource restriction is a major concern in the care for major trauma patients in low- to middle-income countries. Current accepted reference standards does not take the resource restrictions that apply to the vast majority of the world’s injured patients into account. More research is required to describe the problem of resource restrictions in low to middle-income countries, and then working out how to overcome it.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
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:11427/31405 The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar Bruijns, Stevan R Hendrikse, Clint Emergency Medicine Introduction: Injury and violence is a neglected global health problem, despite being largely predictable and therefor preventable. This study aimed to indirectly describe and compare the availability of resources to manage major trauma between high income, and low- to middle-income countries, as self-reported by delegates at the 2016 International Conference on Emergency Medicine held in Cape Town, South Africa. Materials and methods: A survey was distributed to delegates at the International Conference on Emergency Medicine 2016, Cape Town to achieve the study aim. The survey instrument was based on the 2016 NICE guidelines for the management of patients with major trauma. It captured responses from participants working in both pre- and in hospital settings. Responses were grouped according to income group (either high income, or low- to middle-income) based on the responding delegate’s nationality (using the World Bank definition for income group). A Fisher’s Exact test was conducted to compare delegate responses Results: The survey was distributed and opened by 980 delegates, of whom 392 (40%) responded. A total of 206 (53%) respondents were from high-income countries and 186 (47%) were from low- to middle-income countries. Responders of this self-reported survey described a significant discrepancy between the resources and services available to high income countries s and low- to middle-income countries to adequately care for major trauma patients both pre- and in-hospital. Shortages ranged from consumables to analgesia, imaging to specialist services, pre-hospital to in-hospital. Discussion: Resource restriction is a major concern in the care for major trauma patients in low- to middle-income countries. Current accepted reference standards does not take the resource restrictions that apply to the vast majority of the world’s injured patients into account. More research is required to describe the problem of resource restrictions in low to middle-income countries, and then working out how to overcome it. 2020-02-28T13:35:42Z 2020-02-28T13:35:42Z 2019 2020-02-28T11:01:17Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31405 eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Alibhai, Alyshah Zulfikar
The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
title_full The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
title_fullStr The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
title_full_unstemmed The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
title_short The availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings: a self-reported survey of acute care providers
title_sort the availability of acute care resources to treat major trauma in different income settings a self reported survey of acute care providers
topic Emergency Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31405
work_keys_str_mv AT alibhaialyshahzulfikar theavailabilityofacutecareresourcestotreatmajortraumaindifferentincomesettingsaselfreportedsurveyofacutecareproviders