Overview of the Essential Trauma Care Project

被引:35
作者
Mock, C
Joshipura, M
Goosen, J
Maier, R
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Surg, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Acad Traumatol India, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
[3] Johannesburg Hosp, Trauma Unit, Johannesburg, South Africa
关键词
D O I
10.1007/s00268-005-0764-8
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
The Essential Trauma Care (EsTC) Project represents an effort to set reasonable, affordable, minimum standards for trauma services worldwide and to define the resources necessary to actually provide these services to every injured person, even in the lowest-income countries. An emphasis is improved organization and planning, at minimal cost. The EsTC Project is a collaborative effort of the World Health Organization and the International Association for Trauma Surgery and Intensive Care, an integrated society within the International Society of Surgery-Societe Internationale de Chirurgie. A milestone of the project has been the release of Guidelines for Essential Trauma Care. This establishes 11 core Essential Trauma Care services that can be considered "The Rights of the Injured." To assure these services, Guidelines delineates 260 items of human and physical resources that should be in place at the spectrum of health facilities globally. These are delineated in a series of flexible resource tables, to be adjusted based on an individual country's circumstances. Guidelines is intended to serve as both a planning guide and an advocacy statement. It has been used to catalyze improvements in trauma care in several countries. It has stimulated five national-level consultation meetings on trauma care, which constituted the highest governmental attention yet devoted to trauma care in those countries. At these meetings, the EsTC resource templates were adjusted to local circumstances and implementation strategies developed. Future efforts need to emphasize more on-the-ground implementation in individual countries, greater linkages with prehospital care, and wider political endorsement, such as by passage of a World Health Assembly resolution.
引用
收藏
页码:919 / 929
页数:11
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2006, Ghana Med J, DOI DOI 10.4314/GMJ.V38I4.36013
[2]  
ARREOLARISA C, 2004, 7 WORLD C INJ CONTR, P33
[3]   Systematic review of trauma system effectiveness based on registry comparisons [J].
Jurkovich, GJ ;
Mock, C .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1999, 47 (03) :S46-S55
[4]  
Krug E., 1999, WHOHSCPV19911
[5]   Priorities for improving hospital-based trauma care in an African city [J].
London, JA ;
Mock, CN ;
Quansah, RE ;
Abantanga, FA ;
Jurkovich, GJ .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2001, 51 (04) :747-753
[6]   Clinical audit in a developing country [J].
Maher, D .
TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 1996, 1 (04) :409-413
[7]   Systematic review of published evidence regarding trauma system effectiveness [J].
Mann, NC ;
Mullins, RJ ;
MacKenzie, EJ ;
Jurkovich, GJ ;
Mock, CN .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1999, 47 (03) :S25-S33
[8]  
MOCK C, 2004, TRAUMA URGENICA MED, V7, P5
[9]  
Mock Charles, 2003, Inj Control Saf Promot, V10, P45, DOI 10.1076/icsp.10.1.45.14114
[10]   Trauma mortality patterns in three nations at different economic levels: Implications for global trauma system development [J].
Mock, CN ;
Jurkovich, GJ ;
nii-Amon-Kotei, D ;
Arreola-Risa, C ;
Maier, RV .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1998, 44 (05) :804-814