Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 14 de 14
Filter
3.
Int Marit Health ; 67(4): 187-195, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28009394

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A review of activities of Centro Internazionale Radio Medico (International Radio Medical Centre, CIRM) from its foundation in 1935 until its 80th anniversary in 2015 was accomplished. CIRM was founded in 1935 to provide medical assistance via radio to ships with no doctor on board and other distant patients who cannot be reached by a doctor. In 1950 CIRM was established as a non-profit-making foundation and has benefited since 1957 from an annual contribution from the Italian government. METHODS: Review of CIRM case histories and other published material from 1935 to 2015 and presenting them in a scientific yet simplified manner through the use of basic mathematical analysis. All the data was collected from CIRM's official archives in Rome. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The results achieved by the Centre over 80 years include medical assistance to 81,016 patients on board ships (as well as on small islands and aircraft), with more than 500,000 medical messages received and transmitted. CIRM from its inception was organised into a medical service, a telecommunications service and a studies section. In 2002 the Centre was recognised as the Italian Telemedical Maritime Assistance Service (TMAS). In the 2010 the Centre was reorganised as a structure articulated in 4 departments, namely maritime telemedicine, telecommunication, research and occupational medicine. This was achieved to cover the different activities related to comprehensive health protection of seafarers. The 24-h continuous medical service is provided by doctors at the CIRM headquarters. The doctor on duty gives instructions for managing the case and continues to follow the patient with subsequent appointments until recovery or landing. In case of emergencies CIRM co-ordinates the transfer of patients assisted on board ships to a hospital ashore. CIRM has developed innovative approaches for the treatment of diseases and accidents on board of seagoing vessels by introducing standard telemedicine equipment on board ships, allowing the transmission of biomedical data from ships to the Centre. These new solutions are aimed at bringing a significant improvement of medical care for seafarers.


Subject(s)
Naval Medicine/history , Telemedicine/history , Aircraft , Anniversaries and Special Events , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Italy , Naval Medicine/organization & administration , Naval Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Occupational Medicine/history , Occupational Medicine/organization & administration , Occupational Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Patient Transfer/history , Telemedicine/statistics & numerical data
4.
Sanid. mil ; 69(4): 276-282, oct.-dic. 2013.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-119331

ABSTRACT

El transporte aéreo sanitario comenzó en España con la evacuación de heridos en la guerra que manteníamos en el norte de África (1909-1927). Su desarrollo se realizó en el ámbito de la aviación militar debido al ambiente bélico reinante a mediados del siglo pasado. El interés científico en su desarrollo se vio interrumpido por la contienda civil española. En esta se realizaron traslados de heridos en las dos zonas beligerantes que sirvieron de experiencia, sobre todo para los alemanes, para la segunda guerra mundial. Después de la guerra civil, el gobierno estableció sus primeros acuerdos internacionales con la firma de convenios para realizar labores de salvamento en el Mediterráneo occidental, siendo aceptado por ambos bandos enfrentados en la segunda guerra mundial. Con la apertura internacional de España en los años 50 se firman los acuerdos con Estados Unidos que incluyen nuevo material en el campo del salvamento y traslado de enfermos (AU)


Air medical transportation began in Spain with the evacuation of casualties during the North African campaign (1909-1927). Its development was carried out in the environment of the military aviation due to the atmosphere of war in the middle of the last century. The scientific interest in its development was interrupted by the Spanish civil war. During this war casualty evacuations took place on both sides and were a useful experience, mainly for the Germans during the Second World War. After the civil war the government established its first international agreements in order to perform rescue activities in the Western Mediterranean, which were accepted by both sides in the Second World War. With the opening up of Spain in the fifties agreements were signed with the United States including new equipment for the rescue and evacuation of patients (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Patient Transfer/history , Air Ambulances/history , Military Medicine/history , Warfare
5.
Prehosp Disaster Med ; 28(3): 264-71, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23688660

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The 2005 Gulf Coast hurricane season was one of the most costly and deadly in US history. Hurricane Rita stressed hospitals and led to multiple, simultaneous evacuations. This study systematically identified community factors associated with patient movement out of seven hospitals evacuated during Hurricane Rita. METHODS: This study represents the second of two systematic, observational, and retrospective investigations of seven acute care hospitals that reported off-site evacuations due to Hurricane Rita. Participants from each hospital included decision makers that comprised the Incident Management Team (IMT). Investigators applied a standardized interview process designed to assess evacuation factors related to external situational awareness of community activities during facility evacuation due to hurricanes. The measured outcomes were responses to 95 questions within six sections of the survey instrument. RESULTS: Investigators identified two factors that significantly impacted hospital IMT decision making: (1) incident characteristics affecting a facility's internal resources and challenges; and (2) incident characteristics affecting a facility's external evacuation activities. This article summarizes the latter and reports the following critical decision making points: (1) Emergency Operations Plans (EOP) were activated an average of 85 hours (3 days, 13 hours) prior to Hurricane Rita's landfall; (2) the decision to evacuate the hospital was made an average of 30 hours (1 day, 6 hours) from activation of the EOP; and (3) the implementation of the evacuation process took an average of 22 hours. Coordination of patient evacuations was most complicated by transportation deficits (the most significant of the 11 identified problem areas) and a lack of situational awareness of community response activities. All evacuation activities and subsequent evacuation times were negatively impacted by an overall lack of understanding on the part of hospital staff and the IMT regarding how to identify and coordinate with community resources. CONCLUSION: Hospital evacuation requires coordinated processes and resources, including situational awareness that reflects the condition of the community as a result of the incident. Successful hospital evacuation decision making is influenced by community-wide situational awareness and transportation deficits. Planning with the community to create realistic EOPs that accurately reflect available resources and protocols is critical to informing hospital decision making during a crisis. Knowledge of these factors could improve decision making and evacuation practices, potentially reducing evacuation times in future hurricanes.


Subject(s)
Cyclonic Storms , Decision Making , Patient Transfer/organization & administration , Adult , Awareness , Cyclonic Storms/history , Disaster Planning/organization & administration , Health Facility Closure/history , History, 21st Century , Humans , Patient Transfer/history , Retrospective Studies
6.
Gesnerus ; 69(2): 297-329, 2012.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23923340

ABSTRACT

Object of this article is the procedure of the transport of South Tyrol patients to the South Wuerttemberg asylums Zwiefalten und Schussenried as well as to some extent to the former asylum of Weissenau near Ravensburg in 1940 and 1942. Attention is focused on the pioneering state pre-negotiations, the so-called option treaties between the German Reich and Fascist Italy as part of the general aspect of National Socialist bio-Politics.The treatment of these South Tyrol patients in the asylums themselves, as well as their fate will be put into the context of the resettlement actions at the margins of the "Third Reich", which started in 1939 and widely affected the European continent. By presenting the abuse of medical patients in the aim to solve the political problems having occurred after bio-political goals had been set into practice, this study offers new material to the history of National Socialist psychiatry, as well as to National Socialist Foreign Policy in the case of Italy.


Subject(s)
Euthanasia/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Mental Disorders/history , National Socialism/history , Patient Transfer/history , Psychiatry/history , Transportation of Patients/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Italy
7.
Hist Psychiatry ; 22(87 Pt 3): 332-43, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22043665

ABSTRACT

In Exeter, the need for space to treat casualties in World War II led to a significant reduction in capacity at one psychiatric hospital and the closure of another. In spite of this, inpatient stays were longer than in peacetime, partly due to relatives who had to weigh up the advantages and disadvantages of having their unwell kin returned to them. In the latter years of the war, admissions from the Devon catchment area were higher than in peacetime. Having more patients who stayed longer was largely compensated for by utilizing free space as opposed to reducing admissions, leading to overcrowding and a restricted inpatient regime.


Subject(s)
Crowding/psychology , Hospital Bed Capacity , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Intellectual Disability/history , Mental Disorders/history , Patient Transfer/history , Psychosocial Deprivation , World War II , England , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male
8.
Bull Hist Med ; 85(1): 29-56, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21551916

ABSTRACT

After a brief discussion of early- and mid-nineteenth-century hospitals, this article focuses on the years between 1880 and 1939, when those facilities underwent a major transformation and the proportion of hospital deaths steadily increased. During both periods, private hospitals refused admission to many seriously ill people and discharged others when death approached. City hospitals dumped poor patients with advanced disease on chronic care facilities and especially on almshouses. With each transfer, the quality of care sharply declined. And trips from one institution to another often inflicted additional suffering; some accelerated death.


Subject(s)
Hospital Mortality/history , Hospitals, Private/history , Hospitals, Urban/history , Medical Futility , Patient Transfer/history , Quality of Health Care/history , Refusal to Treat , Terminal Care/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , United States
9.
Am J Public Health ; 101(5): 789-95, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21421951

ABSTRACT

Although the term "patient dumping" was rarely used before the 1960s, the practice started much earlier. In the late 1870s, the New York Times began to report that private hospitals were using ambulances to shift poor, moribund patients to Bellevue, the city's preeminent public facility. Many trips had serious medical consequences. Private hospitals also instructed ambulances to take critically ill patients directly to Bellevue regardless of the distance. Efforts to combat such practices took various forms. When transfers resulted in death, Manhattan coroners held inquests. In 1902, the Commissioner of Charities issued an order requiring that he be sent a full report from the superintendent of any hospital in which a patient transferred from another facility died within three days after admission. Four years later, the city passed an ordinance imposing a severe penalty on any hospital official who transferred an ill patient. Those reforms were only partially effective at deterring such transfers.


Subject(s)
Patient Transfer/history , Ambulances/history , Health Care Reform/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , New York City , Patient Transfer/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Transfer/statistics & numerical data
11.
Bioethics ; 24(6): 304-7, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19659856

ABSTRACT

The authors describe the arrival and treatment of 164 severe chronic psychiatric patients who were displaced from the Serbian army-controlled Jakes psychiatric hospital and off-loaded on the afternoon of 28th of May, 1992 at the gates of the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla. Through analysis of their incomplete medical records, which arrived with the patients in Tuzla, and analysis of their activities during and after the war, they found that 83 of the patients (50%) were males and 147 (89.6%) were admitted to the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla. Of the patients, 86 (58.5%) were found to be Serbs. The majority of them were incapable of independent living and required ongoing medical and social care. They were from all regions of Bosnia-Herzegovina, 81.6% had schizophrenia and 70 (47.6%) were over 50 years of age. For its humanitarian work, its contribution to peace and for the maintenance of the multi-ethnic Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla received the Golden Award for Peace from the International Legion of Humanists in May 1998.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Medical/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/history , Patient Transfer/history , Refugees/history , Warfare , Bosnia and Herzegovina , History, 20th Century , Humans , Psychiatry/history , Serbia
12.
Ig Sanita Pubbl ; 64(2): 177-91, 2008.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18523494

ABSTRACT

Community and rural hospitals rely to a greater extent on transferring acute patients to other settings which can provide the required definitive care. Using data on all hospital discharges of patients from the 11 acute care hospitals of the Frosinone Local Health Unit (7 of which were publicly run, and 4 were run by privates) over the period 1997-2005, a study was carried out to assess the frequency, time-trend and determinants of transfers. Between 1997 and 2005, 8,009 patients (1.3%) were transferred to acute care hospitals, while 2,499 (0.4%) were transferred to long-term and rehabilitation hospitals. The proportion of patients transferred to acute care hospitals increased over time, while that of patients transferred to long-term services was stable. Men, the elderly, those admitted in intensive care units and those with orthopaedic injuries, burns, traumas, drug abuse, mental illnesses, neurological and cardiovascular diseases were more likely to be transferred. Adjusting for other risk factors, the hospital of Ceccano had a higher frequency of transfers (8.7%) compared to the other hospitals, while privately administered hospitals showed a much lower percentage of inter-hospital transfers.


Subject(s)
Hospitals , Patient Transfer/history , Patient Transfer/statistics & numerical data , Acute Disease , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Catchment Area, Health , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Italy/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Wounds and Injuries/rehabilitation
14.
Am J Emerg Med ; 15(7): 658-70, 1997 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9375549

ABSTRACT

The early development of legal obligation in emergency medicine is traced through medieval English common law to the first stages of American law after Independence. An identifiable set of legal principles in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is described. The movement away from an absence of legal and ethical duties to answer any emergencies, or to offer any emergency services in hospitals, toward a growing demand for access to emergency services in the middle decades of the twentieth century is reviewed. The enactment of Good Samaritan Laws is described, along with other federal and state law reforms. In the modern era, there has been a substantial legal and ethical change to a requirement of extensive duties to operate open-admission emergency services in virtually all acute-care hospitals. The AIDS epidemic is utilized as a case example of expanded legal and ethical duties to offer emergency care in a nondiscriminatory manner to all patients presenting at hospital emergency departments.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine/history , Emergency Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Liability, Legal/history , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Disease Outbreaks/history , Disease Outbreaks/legislation & jurisprudence , Emergency Service, Hospital/history , Emergency Service, Hospital/legislation & jurisprudence , England , Ethics, Medical/history , Federal Government , Government Regulation , Health Services Accessibility/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Medieval , Humans , Judicial Role , Patient Transfer/history , Patient Transfer/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...