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Developing Prehospital Care in India–A Potential Model for Low- and Middle-income Countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2023

David Bruce
Affiliation:
Faculty of Prehospital Care, Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Trichur Ramakrishnan
Affiliation:
Shree Ramachandra Institute of Higher Education & Research, Chennai, India
Pankaj (Peter) Patel
Affiliation:
Faculty of Disaster Medicine - India & Nepal, Birmingham, United Kingdom
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Abstract

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Introduction:

Road traffic accidents and natural disasters cause significant numbers of deaths and life-changing injuries in low & middle-income countries. Most of these countries have limited resources for pre-hospital care and training. In 2021, there were 155,622 deaths due to road accidents and >18,000 railway-related deaths. Natural and manmade disasters also contribute to high numbers of serious injuries and deaths in the region. India is the pilot for developing an international training course for prehospital trauma care.

Method:

A review of pre-hospital care training and ambulance services in Tamil Nadu and Kerala states of India was carried out in 2019. An international workshop on developing pre-hospital care in India was held in Chennai in October 2022. The workshop included experts from UK and India and 52 practitioners from various parts of India.

Results:

India has developed a country-wide ambulance service sub-contracted to private providers under a public-private partnership initiative and in addition, there are private and charitable providers. In-transit care and resuscitation are limited and the vehicles are primarily a transport mechanism with a scoop-and-run policy. Infrastructure, traffic congestion, rural and hard-to-reach areas, poorly equipped ambulance services and variations in training and scope of practice contribute to the challenges of providing high quality pre-hospital care.

Conclusion:

There is a need for high-quality pre-hospital care training, regulation and continuing professional development within the pre-hospital care sector. Delivery of pre-hospital care could be reinforced by wider involvement of doctors such as General Practitioners and other allied health care professionals. It was agreed by all delegates and speakers that an international course on pre-hospital care based upon an existing UK course from the Faculty of Pre-Hospital Care of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, edited to take account of India’s current resources, should be piloted in Chennai in 2023.

Type
Lightning and Oral Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine