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1.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 18: e80, 2024 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38682546

ABSTRACT

Current escalation of natural disasters, pandemics, and humanitarian crises underscores the pressing need for inclusion of disaster medicine in medical education frameworks. Conventional medical training often lacks adequate focus on the complexities and unique challenges inherent in such emergencies. This discourse advocates for the integration of disaster medicine into medical curricula, highlighting the imperative to prepare health-care professionals for an effective response in challenging environments. These competencies encompass understanding mass casualty management, ethical decision-making amidst resource constraints, and adapting health-care practices to varied emergency contexts. Therefore, we posit that equipping medical students with these specialized skills and knowledge is vital for health-care delivery in the face of global health emergencies.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Education, Medical , Humans , Disaster Medicine/education , Disaster Medicine/methods , Disaster Medicine/trends , Education, Medical/methods , Education, Medical/trends , Education, Medical/standards , Curriculum/trends , Curriculum/standards
2.
Am J Disaster Med ; 19(1): 53-58, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38597647

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess pediatric disaster medicine (PDM) instruction in emergency medicine (EM) residency programs and to identify barriers to integrating these skills into EM training. METHODS: National survey study of United States EM Residency Program Directors (PDs) and Assistant PDs during the 2021-2022 academic year. RESULTS: Of the 186 EM residency programs identified, a total of 24 responses were recorded with a response rate of 12.9 percent. Importance of training was rated 5.79 (standard deviation 2.51) using the Likert scale ranging from 1 to 10. Out of 24 programs, 17 (70.8 percent) do not have any PDM training as part of residency training. Live drill, simulation, and tabletop were identified as most effective methods to deliver PDM training with the Likert scale score of 4.78, 4.6, and 4.47, respectively. Senior trainees' level of -knowledge/skills with family reunification (Likert 2.09/5; chemical-biological-radiological-nuclear explosive 2.95/5) and mass casualty preparation of the emergency department (3.3/5) as assessed by the respondents. The main barrier to education included logistics, eg, space and costs (Likert 3.7/5), lack of didactic time (3.7/5), and limited faculty knowledge, skill, or experience (3.3/5). CONCLUSION: PDM training is lacking and requires standardization. This study highlights the opportunity for the creation of a model for EM resident education in PDM.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Emergency Medicine , Internship and Residency , Mass Casualty Incidents , Humans , United States , Child , Curriculum , Emergency Medicine/education , Disaster Medicine/education , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
BMC Med Educ ; 24(1): 422, 2024 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38641770

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The use of virtual reality (VR) in healthcare education is on the increase. In disaster medicine, it could be a solution to the cost and logistic constraints for a "full-scale" scenarios. However, VR is mainly designed for single players, which is not appropriate for the objectives pursued in disaster medicine. We decided to evaluate the educational value of using individual VR simulation in disaster medicine on a group of learners. METHODS: The VR scenario used was a reproduction of a major train crash, with 21 victims and whose objectives were START triage and first aid techniques. The sessions were carried out in multi-participant groups with different roles (active and immersed with headset, paper triage without headset, and active for communications not immersed in the headset). Their perceived self-efficacy was assessed before (T0), after (T1) and 2 months (T2) after the training. Satisfaction and confidence in learning were also measured. RESULTS: The median levels of satisfaction and confidence in learning were of 21/25 and 32/40 respectively. Their perceived self-efficacy increased significantly between T0 and T1 (p < 0.001), and remained stable until T2. The different roles of participant showed no difference in terms of satisfaction, confidence in learning or changes in perceived self-efficacy. One third of the participants agreed that the number of participants had interfered with their learning. A significant negative correlation (rS = -0.51, p = 0.002) was found between satisfaction and the fact of having been hindered by the number of participants. Around 90% of participants found the activity entertaining and found the new technologies appropriate for learning technical skills. CONCLUSIONS: This first experience of VR in a group setting is satisfactory and shows its positive effects. The limitations highlighted here will enable areas of improvement to be identified for the use of VR in disaster medicine, pending the development of multi-player tools. It would now be appropriate to analyse the impact of this type of simulation on learning and its retention over time.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Virtual Reality , Humans , Computer Simulation , Learning , Triage
5.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 39(2): 218-223, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38465658

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Disaster medicine (DM) is a unique field that has undergone significant development as disaster events become increasingly complicated to respond to. However, DM is not recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) or Accreditation Committee of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), and therefore lacks board certification. Furthermore, prior studies have shown that there is unique body of DM knowledge not being addressed in emergency medicine (EM) residency or Emergency Medical Services (EMS) fellowship, resulting in fundamental DM topics not being covered amongst graduate medical education (GME) programs most prepared to produce DM physicians. A recently published DM core curriculum addresses this knowledge gap and seeks to promote standardization of DM training. STUDY OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to analyze EM residency and EMS fellowship curricula for the inclusion of DM major curriculum topics and subtopics, using the most recently published DM core curriculum as a control. METHODS: Both EM residency and EMS fellowship curricula were analyzed for inclusion of DM curriculum topics and subtopics, using the DM curriculum recommendations published by Wexler, et al as a control. A major curriculum topic was deemed covered if at least one related subtopic was described in the curricula. The included and excluded DM topics and subtopics were analyzed using descriptive statistics. RESULTS: While all the DM major curriculum topics were covered by either EM residency or EMS fellowship, EMS fellowship covered more major curriculum topics (14/15; 93%) than EM residency (12/15; 80%) and EMS fellowship covered more DM curriculum subtopics (58/153; 38%) than EM residency (24/153; 16%). Combined, EM residency and EMS fellowship covered 65 out of 153 (42%) of the DM curriculum subtopics. CONCLUSION: Although this study finds that all the DM major curriculum topics will be covered in EM residency followed by EMS fellowship, over one-half of the subtopics are not covered by either program (16% and 38%, respectively) or both programs combined (42%). Increasingly relevant subtopics, such as climate change, droughts, and flooding, are amongst those not covered by either curriculum. Even amongst the DM topics included in GME curricula, an emphasis on themes such as mass treatment, preparedness, and mitigation is likely under-represented. Accreditation from ACGME for DM fellowship would further promote uniform implementation of the updated core curriculum and ensure optimal training of disaster-ready physicians.


Subject(s)
Curriculum , Disaster Medicine , Emergency Medicine , Fellowships and Scholarships , Internship and Residency , Disaster Medicine/education , United States , Humans , Emergency Medicine/education , Education, Medical, Graduate , Emergency Medical Services
6.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 39(1): 13-19, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38197147

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Investigating the developments in the ever-growing field of disaster medicine and revealing the scientific trends will make an important contribution to researchers in related fields. This study aims to identify the contributions of emergency medicine physicians (EMPs) and trends in disaster medicine publications. METHODS: The expressions "disaster medicine" or "disaster*" and "medicine*" were searched in the Web of Science (WoS) database. Research and review papers produced by EMPs from 2001 through 2021 were included in the study. Basic descriptive information was assessed such as the number of publications, authors, citations, most active authors, institutions, countries, and journals. In addition, conceptual, intellectual, and social structures were analyzed. RESULTS: The study included a total of 346 papers written by 1,500 authors. The mean citation rate per publication was 13.2. Prehospital and Disaster Medicine, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, and Academic Emergency Medicine were the journals with the highest number of publications and the highest number of citations. The most common keywords used by the authors were "disaster medicine," "emergency medicine," and "disaster/disasters." According to the distribution of the corresponding authors by country, the United States (n = 175), Japan (n = 23), Italy (n = 20), Australia (n = 17), and Canada (n = 17) had the highest number of publications. The institutions that produced the most publications were John Hopkins University (n = 37), Brigham and Women's Hospital (n = 27), George Washington University (n = 25), University Piemonte Orientale (n = 24), and Brown University (n = 22). CONCLUSION: Increasingly, EMPs have contributed to disaster medicine publications over the years. This study can be used as a guide for EMPs and other researchers who want to contribute to the disaster medicine literature.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Disasters , Emergency Medicine , Physicians , Humans , Female , United States , Bibliometrics
7.
Copenhagen; World Health Organization. Regional Office for Europe; 2024. (WHO/EURO:2024-9192-48964-72963).
in English | WHO IRIS | ID: who-375991

ABSTRACT

Regional European Emergency Medical Team Capabilities Hub (REECH) will be established in the WHO European Centre for Preparedness for Humanitarian and Health Emergencies (PHHE) in Istanbul, Türkiye to assist countries in the WHO European Region to strengthen their capacities for a health emergency response. REECH’s mission is to strengthen the capacity of the regional EMT network, national health systems and partners, to protect communities and improve patient health outcomes during health emergency response.To provide REECH with strategic direction to meet this goal and other health emergency workforce, a Regional EMT Knowledge and Capacity-strengthening Strategy (KCSS) was developed with the following strategic objectives: advancing EMT evidence-informed research; strengthening EMT knowledge transfer; and cultivating an enabling environment for EMT methodology. The KCSS will guide the EMT capacity-strengthening process led by REECH across five core areas of work: strengthening regional EMT governance; quality assurance and mentorship for national EMTs; advance EMT deployment and coordination in emergencies; improve the quality of EMT preparedness and response activities; and digitalization of the REECH and EMT work.As a regional platform for strengthening EMT capacity, REECH will be integrated into the EMT ecosystem within the EMT community, national health systems and partners as a target audience.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Disaster Planning , Capacity Building , Emergency Responders
8.
CJEM ; 25(12): 949-952, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37948002

ABSTRACT

Mass-casualty incidents have a significant global impact. Despite calls for improved disaster-preparedness training, most medical curriculums do not include formal disaster-medicine education. In 2021, the Medical Council of Canada introduced new disaster-medicine learning objectives. This article presents a mass-casualty-incident course for 3rd-year Canadian medical students. The course includes lectures, and a large-scale simulation of an explosion scene, field triage zone, and simulated emergency department (ED). The simulation incorporated "Dark-team-member" facilitators and 17 live actor and 8 mannequin patients with moulage. Pre-/post-event evaluation data was collected. One-hundred and twenty medical students participated in the course. Confidence in managing a real mass-casualty incident, on a scale from 1 to 10 (no-confidence to completely confident) significantly improved based on a Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.05. Few formal medical student mass-casualty-incident courses exist. Combining "Dark-team-members" with live actors, imbedding clinician facilitators with medical students, and having a simulation with a continuous disaster scene to the ED are unique to this course. The methodology is presented for future replication.


RéSUMé: Les incidents faisant de nombreuses victimes ont un impact mondial significatif. Malgré les appels à l'amélioration de la formation à la préparation aux catastrophes, la plupart des cursus médicaux n'incluent pas de formation formelle à la médecine des catastrophes. En 2021, le Conseil médical du Canada a introduit de nouveaux objectifs d'apprentissage en médecine de catastrophe. Cet article présente un cours sur les accidents de masse destiné aux étudiants en médecine canadiens de troisième année. Le cours comprend des cours magistraux et une simulation à grande échelle d'une scène d'explosion, d'une zone de triage sur le terrain et d'un service d'urgence (SU) simulé. La simulation comprenait des facilitateurs "Dark-team-member" et 17 acteurs réels et 8 patients mannequins avec moulage. Des données d'évaluation avant/après l'événement ont été collectées. Cent vingt étudiants en médecine ont participé au cours. La confiance dans la gestion d'un véritable incident de masse, sur une échelle de 1 à 10 (aucune confiance à une confiance totale), s'est améliorée de manière significative d'après un test U de Mann-Whitney p<0,05. Il existe peu de cours formels sur les accidents de masse à l'intention des étudiants en médecine. La combinaison de " Dark-team-member " avec des acteurs en chair et en os, l'intégration d'animateurs cliniciens avec des étudiants en médecine et la simulation d'une scène de catastrophe continue au service des urgences sont des éléments uniques de ce cours. La méthodologie est présentée pour être reproduite à l'avenir.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Disaster Planning , Mass Casualty Incidents , Students, Medical , Humans , Disaster Medicine/education , Disaster Planning/methods , Canada , Triage/methods
9.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 38(6): 697-698, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37970889

ABSTRACT

The recently published Model Core Content of Disaster Medicine introduces proposed curriculum elements for specialized education and training in Disaster Medicine. This editorial comments on the publishing decision for the manuscript.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Humans , Disaster Medicine/education , Curriculum
11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37835161

ABSTRACT

Planning the medical services for the triathlon competition at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games was predicted to be challenging because of possible last-minute changes related to the COVID-19 pandemic and abnormally high temperatures. Therefore, event planners organized and executed a disaster medical care plan, a plan for providing care during emergencies. Based on the basic medical plan for all venues provided by the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, planners for the triathlon venue prepared a medical care plan according to the CSCATTT principles: Command and control, Safety, Communication, Assessment, Treatment, Triage, and Transport. After the event, planners evaluated the number of COVID-19, heatstroke, and injury cases at the venue. The events were conducted without spectators in July and August 2022 because at the last minute, planners held the event without spectators. The triathlon competition involved 638 individuals, including athletes and staff. In total, 7 cases of injuries, 3 cases of mild heatstroke, and 13 other cases were reported, with only 2 requiring emergency transportation. No cases of COVID-19 were reported from the triathlon venue, including during the observation period after the event. This medical plan was effective in preventing heatstroke and COVID-19 cases during the big event. Efficiently and effectively responding to various situations is possible in a shorter period by planning large-scale medical services for such special circumstances according to CSCATTT, a principle of disaster medical care.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Disaster Medicine , Heat Stroke , Humans , Pandemics , Tokyo/epidemiology , COVID-19/epidemiology
12.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 38(6): 699-706, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37869875

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Disaster Medicine (DM) is the clinical specialty whose expertise includes the care and management of patients and populations outside conventional care protocols. While traditional standards of care assume the availability of adequate resources, DM practitioners operate in situations where resources are not adequate, necessitating a modification in practice. While prior academic efforts have succeeded in developing a list of core disaster competencies for emergency medicine residency programs, international fellowships, and affiliated health care providers, no official standardized curriculum or consensus has yet been published to date for DM fellowship programs based in the United States. STUDY OBJECTIVE: The objective of this work is to define the core curriculum for DM physician fellowships in the United States, drawing consensus among existing DM fellowship directors. METHODS: A panel of DM experts was created from the members of the Council of Disaster Medicine Fellowship Directors. This council is an independent group of DM fellowship directors in the United States that have met annually at the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP)'s Scientific Assembly for the last eight years with meeting support from the Disaster Preparedness and Response Committee. Using a modified Delphi technique, the panel members revised and expanded on the existing Society of Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) DM fellowship curriculum, with the final draft being ratified by an anonymous vote. Multiple publications were reviewed during the process to ensure all potential topics were identified. RESULTS: The results of this effort produced the foundational curriculum, the 2023 Model Core Content of Disaster Medicine. CONCLUSION: Members from the Council of Disaster Medicine Fellowship Directors have developed the 2023 Model Core Content for Disaster Medicine in the United States. This living document defines the foundational curriculum for DM fellowships, providing the basis of a standardized experience, contributing to the development of a board-certified subspecialty, and informing fellowship directors and DM practitioners of content and topics that may appear on future certification examinations.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Emergency Medicine , Physicians , Humans , United States , Disaster Medicine/education , Curriculum , Certification , Emergency Medicine/education , Education, Medical, Graduate
13.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 17: e509, 2023 09 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37705279

ABSTRACT

For the first time in history, the United States surpassed 100 000 overdose-related deaths in a 12-month period, driven by synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. Also, for the first time, potential chemical weapons are readily available on the streets and the dark web. Opioids represent a rare trifecta, used for licit pain management, as an illicit drug of abuse, and with potential use as a weapon of terror. Community-based Response to Drug Overdose (CReDO) is an initiative to unite agencies, disciplines, government, and private partners in 1 coordinated opioid emergencies response plan under nationwide standards, and can be integrated into the disaster medicine discipline due to the risk of mass casualty incidents involving fentanyl or its derivatives. Attention to the opioid crisis through CReDO will save lives by promoting information sharing between disciplines, shortened response time to overdose clusters, community collaboration to identify criminal distribution networks, and holistic approaches to addiction.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Drug Overdose , Humans , United States , Opioid Epidemic , Analgesics, Opioid/adverse effects , Fentanyl , Drug Overdose/prevention & control , Drug Overdose/epidemiology
14.
Washington, D.C.; OPAS; 2023-09-12.
in Portuguese | PAHO-IRIS | ID: phr-57966

ABSTRACT

O objetivo deste manual é fornecer uma descrição clara dos princípios, padrões e normas que as equipes médicas de emergência (EMTs) devem cumprir para oferecer um atendimento de qualidade aos pacientes. Ele também pretende ser um guia prático e informativo para os Estados Membros, Ministérios da Saúde, técnicos nacionais e internacionais e outras partes interessadas importantes que desejam desenvolver essa capacidade e entender melhor os requisitos. Ele se baseia no conhecimento, na experiência e nas lições aprendidas de indivíduos e da rede de EMTs, e é complementado por informações e documentos de orientação técnica disponíveis na rede de conhecimento EMT. Esta edição da Classificação e padrões mínimos para equipes médicas de emergência amplia esses esforços, incorporando mais áreas para expansão da tipologia, das capacidades e das competências das EMT e refinando os princípios norteadores e os padrões fundamentais, além de adotar uma melhor estruturação de todos os padrões técnicos de cuidados clínicos e suporte operacional esperados das EMT. Além disso, este documento aproveita conhecimentos, experiências e lições aprendidas de indivíduos e da rede EMT.


Subject(s)
Emergencies , Hospital Rapid Response Team , Disaster Medicine , Emergency Medical Services
15.
Sichuan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban ; 54(4): 831-836, 2023 Jul.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37545082

ABSTRACT

Objective: To analyze Chinese national laws and regulations on emergencies from the perspective of nursing and on the basis of the crisis life cycle theory, to discuss the weaknesses in laws and regulations concerning emergencies, and to provide evidence for the definition of the scope of disaster nursing practice in China. Methods: We selected emergency laws and regulations promulgated by the National People's Congress and its Standing Committee and the State Council as the subject matter of the study, constructing the analysis framework on the basis of the core competence of disaster nursing and crisis life cycle theory. Then, the 16 laws and regulations included in the study were analyzed with NVivo 12 software by the content analysis method. Results: A total of 6 laws and regulations concerning earthquakes, 3 concerning infectious diseases, 2 concerning fire, 2 concerning food poisoning, 2 concerning emergencies, and 1 concerning flood were selected. A total of 24 food poisoning-related codes, 23 infectious disease codes, 22 emergency event codes, 22 earthquake codes, 21 fire codes, and 16 flood codes were obtained. In the key links of emergency preparedness, early prevention had the highest number of reference points, whereas collaborative response had the lowest number of reference points. In the key processes of emergency preparedness, aftermath management had the highest number of reference points, whereas social services and continuous operation had the lowest numbers of reference points. Conclusion: Laws and regulations concerning emergencies are generally formulated on the basis of certain historical experience, with collaborative response, social services, and continuous operation being the weak links and processes. In the process of disaster nursing practice, we should effectively make up for the weaknesses in laws and regulations concerning emergencies by utilizing the positive aspects and the essence of the discipline.


Subject(s)
Disaster Medicine , Emergency Nursing , Humans , China , Disaster Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergencies , Emergency Nursing/legislation & jurisprudence , Models, Theoretical
16.
Washington, D.C.; OPS; 2023-08-18.
Non-conventional in Spanish | PAHO-IRIS | ID: phr-57880

ABSTRACT

El objetivo de este manual es ofrecer una descripción clara de los principios y normas y normas que deben cumplir los equipos médicos de emergencia (EMT) para prestar una asistencia de calidad a los pacientes. También pretende ser una guía práctica e informativa para los Estados miembros, ministerios de sanidad, técnicos nacionales e internacionales y otras partes interesadas clave que deseen crear dicha capacidad y comprender mejor los requisitos. Además, se basa en los conocimientos, la experiencia y las lecciones aprendidas de particulares y de la red de EMTs, y se complementa con la información y los documentos de orientación técnica disponibles en la red de conocimientos de la iniciativa EMT.


Subject(s)
Emergencies , Hospital Rapid Response Team , Disaster Medicine , Emergency Medical Services
17.
Washington D.C; Organización Panamericana de la Salud; 1 ed; Ago. 2023. 162 p. ilus.
Monography in Spanish | MINSAPERÚ, LIPECS | ID: biblio-1510353

ABSTRACT

La presente publicación describe los principios y normas que deben cumplir los equipos médicos de emergencia (EMT) para prestar una asistencia de calidad a los pacientes. Asimismo , se trata de una guía práctica e informativa para los países, ministerios de sanidad, técnicos nacionales e internacionales y otras partes interesadas clave que deseen crear dicha capacidad y comprender mejor los requisitos. Además, se basa en los conocimientos, la experiencia y las lecciones aprendidas de particulares y de la red de EMTs, y se complementa con la información y los documentos de orientación técnica disponibles en la red de conocimientos de la iniciativa EMT


Subject(s)
Emergencies , Emergency Medical Services , Disaster Medicine , Hospital Rapid Response Team
18.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 17: e438, 2023 07 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37489507

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Despite rising incidences of global disasters, basic principles of disaster medicine training are barely taught in Singapore's 3 medical schools. The aim of this study was to evaluate the current levels of emergency preparedness, attitudes, and perceptions of disaster medicine education among medical students in Singapore. METHODS: The Emergency Preparedness Information Questionnaire (EPIQ) was provided to enrolled medical students in Singapore by means of an online form, from March 6, 2020, to February 20, 2021. A total of 635 (25.7%) responses were collated and analyzed. RESULTS: Mean score for overall familiarity was low, at 1.50 ± 0.74, on a Likert scale of 1 for not familiar to 5 for very familiar. A total of 90.6% of students think that disaster medicine is an important facet of the curriculum, and 93.1% agree that training should be provided for medical students. Although 77.3% of respondents believe that they are unable to contribute to a disaster scenario currently, 92.8% believe that they will be able to contribute with formal training. CONCLUSIONS: Despite low levels of emergency preparedness knowledge, the majority of medical students in Singapore are keen for adaptation of disaster medicine into the current curriculum to be able to contribute more effectively. This can arm future health-care professionals with the confidence to respond to any potential emergency.


Subject(s)
Civil Defense , Disaster Medicine , Students, Medical , Humans , Singapore , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
19.
Rev. esp. med. legal ; 49(2): 71-78, Abril - Junio 2023. graf
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-224050

ABSTRACT

La identificación de cadáveres en sucesos con múltiples víctimas es un reto y una de las actividades principales de la patología forense. De la correcta identificación y gestión de identificación se derivan repercusiones legales, humanitarias y sociales generando un gran impacto.El objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar el proceso de gestión e identificación de las 13 víctimas mortales del accidente de autobús ocurrido en la autopista AP7 en marzo de 2016, en Freginals (Tarragona, España). Se analizan las rápidas identificaciones de las víctimas mortales, los diferentes mecanismos de control de calidad empleados, la atención a los familiares, así como la gestión propia de la catástrofe con los recursos humanos y materiales disponibles.A pesar de la nacionalidad extranjera de todas las víctimas, que determinó el método de identificación, todas ellas fueron identificadas rápidamente mediante odontología, huellas dactilares o ADN y fueron rápidamente retornadas a sus familias y países de origen. Italia fue el país de donde procedían un mayor número de víctimas. Se destaca la participación de los médicos forenses en la recuperación de datos antemortem. (AU)


Corpses identification in events with multiple victims is a challenge and one of the main activities of Forensic Pathology. Legal, humanitarian and social repercussions are derived from the correct identification and also its management, generating a great impact.The objective of this paper is to present the management and identification process of the 13 deaths that occurred in the bus accident on the AP7 motorway in March 2016 in Freginals (Tarragona, Spain). The rapid identification of fatalities, the different quality control mechanisms used, attention to family members, as well as the proper management of the catastrophe with the human and material resources available are analysed.Despite the foreign nationality of all the victims, which determined the method of identification, all of them were quickly identified by dentistry, fingerprinting or DNA and were quickly returned to their families and countries of origin. Italy was the country where the largest number of victims came from. The participation of forensic doctors in ante mortem data recovery is highlighted. (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Forensic Dentistry , Forensic Medicine , Autopsy , DNA , Victims Identification , Disaster Victims , Disaster Medicine , Surge Capacity , Spain
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