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Báo cáo y học: " Engendering enthusiasm for sustainable disaster critical care response: why this is of consequence to critical care professionals"

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Tuyển tập các báo cáo nghiên cứu về y học được đăng trên tạp chí y học Critical Care cung cấp cho các bạn kiến thức về ngành y đề tài: Engendering enthusiasm for sustainable disaster critical care response: why this is of consequence to critical care professionals? | Available online http ccforum.eom content 9 2 125 Commentary Engendering enthusiasm for sustainable disaster critical care response why this is of consequence to critical care professionals Saqib I Dara1 Rendell W Ashton2 and J Christopher Farmer3 1 Critical Care Medicine fellow Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA 2Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine fellow Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA 3Consultant in Critical Care Medicine and Professor of Medicine Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and the Program in Translational Immunovirology and Biodefense Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA Corresponding author J Christopher Farmer farmer.j@mayo.edu Published online 27 January 2005 This article is online at http ccforum.com content 9 2 125 2005 BioMed Central Ltd Critical Care 2005 9 125-127 DOI 10.1186 cc3048 Abstract Disaster medical response has historically focused on the prehospital and initial treatment needs of casualties. In particular the critical care component of many disaster response plans is incomplete. Equally important routinely available critical care resources are almost always insufficient to respond to disasters that generate anything beyond a modest casualty stream. Large-scale monetary funding to effectively remedy these shortfalls is unavailable. Education training and improved planning are our most effective initial steps. We suggest several areas for further development including dual usage of resources that may specifically augment critical care disaster medical capabilities over time. Disasters have been a part of human existence since ancient times and so has disaster medicine 1 . We define disaster medicine as a human response to unexpected mayhem with the intent to limit death disease and injury. In recent decades disaster medical response has largely focused on prehospital care issues such as casualty evacuation triage and .

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