Author/Authors :
Calvello Hynes , Emilie J. Department of Emergency Medicine - University of Colorado School of Medicine - Aurora - CO, USA
Abstract :
Emergency care systems and a pandemic
The current global pandemic of SARS-CoV-2 has dramatically altered
how we live our lives, how we conceptualise the risks and benefits of
globalisation, and how we understand the fragility of health systems.
The constant stream of news is filled with reports of health systems
overwhelmed, flares of the virus in locations where it was previously
thought contained and projections of worsening resource limitations
that may have dire consequences for patients’ survival. Emergency
centres have been highlighted as mission critical locations in response to
this pandemic. In fact, emergency centres have become de facto inten-sive care units in the Americas, Europe and Asia, as they are often the
only other safe location where critical care can be provided outside of
overburdened intensive care units.
As this crisis has starkly revealed, emergency care systems are the
essential foundation to provide an effective response to any type of mass
casualty event. During infectious disease outbreaks emergency care
systems serve multiple critical roles, including immediate syndromic
recognition of disease, isolation to protect patients and health care
workers, and care for emergency conditions associated with the
outbreak, such as respiratory failure and shock. Emergency care systems
must also scale efforts to respond to further health crises that may arise
as a result of the epidemic, including acute exacerbations of chronic
disease....
Keywords :
Editorial , Sub-Saharan African , emergency care systems , pandemic