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Specificities of Surgery in Time of Armed Conflict or Natural Disaster Christos Giannou Advanced Course in the Management of Disaster Victims Nicosia, October 2011
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Understand what you are getting into BEFORE you go.
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Natural disaster, accident, isolated explosion One-off event: surprise, warning War Successive events: NO surprise, political build-up
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1. Rights and obligations of Medical Personnel 2. Specific epidemiology of war (constant) / disaster (variable) 3. Predominance of emergency surgery (especially during early tactical field care) 4. Surgery within a limited technical environment 5. Limits of surgery: post-operative nursing + anaesthesia 6. Surgery in a hostile, violent environment
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7. Mass casualties involving the principles of triage 8. Surgery and triage in successive echelons (delayed evacuation) 9. Specific wound pathology, qualitatively different from civilian wounds: ballistics & blast; all are dirty and contaminated 10. Specific techniques appropriate to the context and pathology: simplicity, security, speed 11. Importance of disease: disease is four times more common than trauma among soldiers; disaster public health approach
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1. Rights and obligations of Medical Personnel 2. Specific epidemiology of war (constant) / disaster (variable) 3. Predominance of emergency surgery (especially during early tactical field care) 4. Surgery within a limited technical environment 5. Limits of surgery: post-operative nursing + anaesthesia 6. Surgery in a hostile, violent environment
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Medical Ethics Oath of Hippocrates: International Code of Medical Ethics: WMA 1949 London, 2006 Pilanesberg S. Africa
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International Humanitarian Law: laws of war Geneva Conventions 1949 Additional Protocol I 1977
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1. Rights and obligations of International Humanitarian Law: laws of war 2. Specific epidemiology of war (constant) / disaster (variable) 3. Predominance of emergency surgery 4. Surgery within a limited technical environment 5. Limits of surgery: post-operative nursing + anaesthesia 6. Surgery in a hostile, violent environment
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War wounded in the field: epidemiology First Aid Dressing 40-60 % No surgery 10-15% Head 10-12% Chest 8-10% Abdomen 60-70% Limbs 90% Surgery Small wounds Paraplegia Tetraplegia Observation 10% NO Surgery 40-60 % Hospital care WW in the field (GSW, mine, blast) 100 wounded
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War wounded: causes of death Severe injury (brain, major vessels) Haemorrhage: peripheral Airway, breathing Coagulopathy, acidosis, hypothermia / multiple system failure
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Natural disaster: context Earthquake demographic density type of construction access: rural or urban Tsunami Storm / flooding Neighbourhood nuclear plant
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Epidemiology of disaster wounded: collapse of 8-storey building China 80% of entrapped died immediately or early 10% survived with minor injuries 10% severe injuries of which 70% developed crush syndrome
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Earthquake Survival Rate: % survivors still alive without extraction
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Earthquake: causes of death Immediate: severe crush of head or thorax (organ damage + suffocation) Early: ABC Delayed: dehydration, hypothermia Late: crush syndrome (acute renal failure), sepsis, multiple organ failure
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1. Rights and obligations of International Humanitarian Law: laws of war 2. Specific epidemiology of war (constant) / disaster (variable) 3. Predominance of emergency surgery 4. Surgery within a limited technical environment 5. Limits of surgery: post-operative nursing + anaesthesia 6. Surgery in a hostile, violent environment
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Specificities of austere environments Damaged infrastructure (water, electricity) Lack of experienced human resources: competency, fatigue, fear Lack of equipment and supplies: appropriate Lack of blood for transfusion "Humanitarian circus" and military-civilian cooperation Culture shock
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Norwegian RC field hospital: ERU post-tsunami Banda Aceh
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Field Surgical Team Darfur
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Recycling of a prison
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Somali Red Crescent Society: No State
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Shatilla refugee camp 1987
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Understanding the limits simplicity of diagnostic means available laboratory: Hb/Hct, blood grouping & screening anaesthesia (local, regional, ketamine) availability of blood (no components): autotransfusion patient monitoring (BP, P, O 2 saturation) post-operative nursing care Heroic surgery will never replace good surgery.
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Clinical skills Lucky if you have X-rays Chest tube & laparotomy on clinical basis alone (no DPL) No place for CPR, ER thoracotomy Limited- or non- use of endotracheal intubation, no mechanical ventilation Proper indications and use of damage control techniques Will you see your patient again? Category IV? supportive treatment
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Always plan for alternatives: infrastructure equipment communications supplies, logistics human resources
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1. Rights and obligations of International Humanitarian Law: laws of war 2. Specific epidemiology of war (constant) / disaster (variable) 3. Predominance of emergency surgery 4. Surgery within a limited technical environment 5. Limits of surgery: post-operative nursing + anaesthesia 6. Surgery in a hostile, violent environment
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Hostile, violent environment
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7. Mass casualties involving the principles of triage 8. Surgery and triage in successive echelons (delayed evacuation) 9. Specific wound pathology, qualitatively different from civilian wounds: ballistics & blast; all are dirty and contaminated 10. Specific techniques appropriate to the context and pathology: simplicity, security, speed 11. Importance of disease: disease is four times more common than trauma among soldiers; disaster public health approach
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Everyday work MCI MAD Triage
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7. Mass casualties involving the principles of triage 8. Surgery and triage in successive echelons (delayed evacuation) 9. Specific wound pathology, qualitatively different from civilian wounds: ballistics & blast; all are dirty and contaminated 10. Specific techniques appropriate to the context and pathology: simplicity, security, speed 11. Importance of disease: disease is four times more common than trauma among soldiers; disaster public health approach
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Old lessons for new surgeons War / disaster wounds are dirty and contaminated, from the moment of injury. The rules of septic surgery apply.
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Principles of septic surgery The best antibiotic is good surgery.
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7. Mass casualties involving the principles of triage 8. Surgery and triage in successive echelons (delayed evacuation) 9. Specific wound pathology, qualitatively different from civilian wounds: ballistics & blast; all are dirty and contaminated 10. Specific techniques appropriate to the context and pathology: simplicity, security, speed 11. Importance of disease: disease is four times more common than trauma among soldiers; disaster public health approach
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