RescueRanger
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Terrorism and Casualty care in Balochistan
Written by: RescueRanger
Category cloud: Opinion, analysisWhilst these numbers provide solace that the scourge of terrorism in the country is on the decline, it offers little comfort to the loved ones of innocent victims caught up in acts of terrorism.
Based on available data from 2019, KPK was the province with the highest number of terrorism incidents, however Balochistan with a considerably lower number of incidents witnessed greater casualties. [1]
In her joint study covering patterns of injury witnessed in patients presenting to accident and emergency at CMH, Quetta Dr. Alia Rasikh and her team discovered that out of the total of 3034 patients reported to the hospital between 2012-2015, 2228 were admitted (73.4%). Out of the injured, 1720 (56.69%) were patients of multi system trauma, whereas 1314 (43.3%) had a single site injury. Out of these 537 patients had fractures of long bones (17.6%), those with head & spinal injuries with neurological deficit were 455 (14.9%), 266 had abdominal injuries requiring surgical intervention (8.7%), 75 (2.47%) had thoracic injuries were whereas 25 (0.82%) were vascular injuries, requiring emergent limb saving surgeries. [2]
Dr Rasikh and her team concluded that based on their findings the M=majority of the injured had multi-system injuries; therefore the hospital should have a well-trained multi-disciplinary team of surgeons. In addition to general surgery, the sub-specialities' should include orthopaedics, vascular, thoracic and neurosurgery.
A further study carried out a multidisciplinary team at the Pakistan Journal of Public Health into the preparedness of hospitals in Balochistan and pre-hospital care found that 'People mostly rely on the trauma management facilities of military hospitals in emergency situations. Study revealed that 80 percent of the hospitals were without any formal written plan. Major weaknesses observed were regarding training of staff, mental health services, hospital networking, security of facility, and lack of an organised system of pre-hospital management of casualties.'[3]
And the perhaps the key difference here between the disparity of casualties vs number of incidents between KPK and Balochistan is the lack of a well trained and organised pre-hospital ambulance service.
Challenges for EMS/Prehospital care providers in Balochistan:
1. Terrain, unlike Quetta or even KPK, Balochistan is a very large part of the country with varying degree of paved roads, dirt tracks and impassable rugged terrain, this makes access to traditional ambulance operations somewhat difficult.
Critical patient care can be categorised by severity, distance and time:
- Severity - the life-threatening injuries sustained by the casualty and deterioration in the minutes that follow.
- Distance - The actual road miles to the incident and the subsequent transportation time to the hospital
- Time - The time taken for the whole rescue team to respond to the incident and remove the casualty.
Emergency Doctors and surgeons the world over will talk about the importance of the Golden Hour, the term “golden hour” is a well-known lexicon among trauma surgeons and emergency medical service (EMS) providers who care for injured patients on a daily basis. The underlying tenet of this adage suggests an injured patient has 60 min from time of injury to receive definitive care, after which morbidity and mortality significantly increase. [4]
P.10 / Platinum 10:
An accident can happen anywhere, anytime and because the attendance time to an incident is an unknown quantity, for all practical purposes it cannot be introduced as part of the equation. Therefore the Platinum Ten is the first 10 minutes following the arrival of the key players in the rescue team.
As terrorism injuries often resemble those injuries sustained by soldiers in combat, examining Colonel Ron Bellamy's study on combat injury and trauma care Bellamy (Figure 3) found that massive haemorrhage from extremities comprised over 9% of the all deaths in Vietnam. However, of the leading three causes of preventable death, it was about 60%.[5]
Eastridge et al. (Figure 4) found 91% of the potentially survivable patients died from haemorrhage. Since 2001, there have been over 2,000,000 deaths from trauma[6]. In addition to the above the victims of a terrorism incident may or may not be victims of blast injuries, according to the latest guidelines published in the Tactical Combat Casualty Care Handbook; blast injury mechanisms can be categorised into 4 types:
- Type 1: Overpressure injury to hollow organs (ears, lungs, intestines)
- Type 2: Penetrating injuries caused by flying debris
- Type 3: Blunt injuries caused by physical displacement of victim by blast
- Type 4: Associated injuries such as chemical exposures, psychiatric sequelae, crush injury, etc.
a. Dyspnea or rapid shallow respirations
b. Decreased breath sounds (possible pneumothorax or lung contusion)
c. Hypoxia, cyanosis, anxiety, or apathy
d. Cough or hemoptysis (possibly severe enough to require airway management)
e. Chest pain, bradycardia, and hypotension
f. Penetrating neck or torso trauma, skull fracture, spinal injury, long-bone
fractures, or traumatic amputations, >10% BSA burn, or inhalational injury in
enclosed spaces
g. Ruptured tympanic membrane [7]
The dilapidated healthcare system in Balochistan is not equipped to provide this level of care both in and out of hospital, in addition to the challenges presented by the security, political, economic and social dynamics of the province, the provincial prehospital care system relies on the voluntary effort of EDHI Ambulance, which whilst a very noble and admirable effort is not designed to provide critical patient care.
Local ambulances are provided by charitable trusts like EDHI which are not staffed by appropriately trained EMT's not are they equipped for critical patient care with equipment such as patient monitors, AED's, Oxygen, Suction and the like.
The lack of these facilities further reduces the survival chances of victims of catastrophic haemorrhages, mass-casualty incidents and blast injuries. Balochistan like Karachi has delayed the induction of a Rescue 1122 office.
Recommendations:
- PDMA Balochistan should engage with NSET (PEER) to run HOPE (Hospital Preparedness for Emergencies) courses to develop surge capacity within major hospitals in the province to handle at minimum 50% more than the normal maximum number of trauma patients.
- Balochistan has over 653 Basic Health Units and Health Facilities BHUs/HFs across thirty-three districts of Balochistan, several of these could be used for the establishment of a pilot 1122 helpline complete with CAD (Computer Aided Dispatch), Command and Control, trunked radio service with redundancies and an emergency ambulance and rescue service between Quetta and the N-50 Highway.
- First Responder training for law enforcement: Quetta and Balochistan has a very high law enforcement presence, in most situations the law enforcement officers are first responders in their areas, this is a missed opportunity to develop viable human capacity as a life saving resource. Short of investing in complex first aid courses for police officers and FC, localised training can be run to cover the basics of trauma care to include basic life support and bleeding control, this will help bridge the gap between the casualty being discovered and the ambulance arriving.
[1] Pakistan Security Report 2019, Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, Islamabad.
[2] Pattern of Injuries Seen in Mass Casualties in Terrorist Attacks in Balocistan, Pakistan - A three year experience, Journal of Ayub Medical College Abbottabad, Dec 2015, Maqsood-R, Rasikh-A et.al PMID: 27004339.
[3] Challenges of Hospital Preparedness in Disasters in Balochistan, 2017, Latif N, Et.Al, Pakistan Journal of Public Health, Vol 7, No1 PP 22.
[4] PHTLS: Prehospital Trauma Life Support Manual 8th Edition, Nov 2014, National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians, USA.
[5] Bellamy RF. The causes of death in conventional land warfare: implications for combat casualty care research. Mil Med. 1984;149(2):55–62. Based on the Wound Data Munitions Effectiveness Team (WDMET) during the Vietnam War between 1967 and 1969.
[6] Eastridge BJ, Mabry RL, Seguin PG, et al. Death on the battlefield (2001–2011): implications for the future of combat casualty care. Journal of Trauma 2012, 73(6) Suppl 5: 431–7
[7] Tactical Combat Casualty Care Handbook, AMEDD Centre and School, US ARMY, USA.
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