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Aunque pueda contener afirmaciones, datos o apuntes procedentes de instituciones o profesionales sanitarios, la información contenida en el blog EMS Solutions International está editada y elaborada por profesionales de la salud. Recomendamos al lector que cualquier duda relacionada con la salud sea consultada con un profesional del ámbito sanitario. by Dr. Ramon REYES, MD

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.
Fuente Ministerio de Interior de España

jueves, 18 de abril de 2019

Faster and higher level #combat care to upgrade the golden hour to platinum 15 minutes by breakingdefense.com


faster and higher level #combat care to upgrade the golden hour to platinum 15 minutes

The Army’s Plan To Save The Wounded In Future War
Even with faster medevac aircraft, uparmored ambulances, and more medical personnel at the front, will casualties get to life-saving care within the "golden hour"?

CAPITOL HILL: The high-tech chaos of future battlefields will make it much harder to save wounded soldiers, the Army Chief of Staff warned Congress this week. Evacuating them will require not only new high-speed medevac aircraft and tank-like armored ambulances, Gen. Mark Milley said, but also a radical reorganization of the Army’s medical corps to bring care as close as possible to the front line.

We’ve covered the equipment part of this equation — more on that below — but the personnel side is equally important and quite possibly more complicated. “People can tell you how incredibly confused I was at the hearing [on] medical services last week,” Rep. Pete Visclosky, the chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee, told Army leaders at a hearing on the Army budget this week.

It turns out it’s confusing because two things are happening at once, Gen. Milley and Army Secretary Mark Esper explained:

There’s a military-wide reorganization — mandated by Congress — that’s consolidating Army, Air Force, and Navy/Marine medical services into a single Defense Health Agency system to provide more cost- efficient healthcare for troops and their families back in the US.
But there’s also an Army-specific reorganization intended to free up doctors, nurses, and other medical specialists from hospital duties in the US so they can train and deploy with frontline combat units.
“The Army several months ago started looking at what we need for the fielded force in terms of medics and docs and surgeons, PAs, you name it,” Sec. Esper said. (This is probably part of a much wider study of how to reorganize the Army for future multi-domain operations). “There’s a lot of change happening there,” the secretary said. “We didn’t think we had the right numbers and the right specialties for the fielded force, the units that go to war.”

“Those are two different capabilities,” Gen. Milley added. “One is [to] stay home in the medical treatment facilities, the hospitals, take care of soldiers and families. The other is a combat medical capability, distributed within tactical units: They’re going to be on the forward edge of the battlefield.”

Bell photo
Bell V-280 Valor tiltrotor in level flight with rotors facing forward. The V-280 is widely considered the leading candidate for the Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA)

The Air Support Problem

The problem, Milley explained, is that ground forces have gotten used to air support essentially on call 24-7. That includes rapid medical evacuation that could pick up casualties from the battlefield and quickly bring them to centralized medical facilities with lots of staff and equipment.

BAE photo
A medical variant of the BAE Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle. AMPVs will serve as both armored ambulances and mobile operating rooms.

Against adversaries better-armed than the Taliban, that might not work. Russia and China have long-range precision missiles that can devastate big bases, forcing support services — including medical care — to disperse, hide, and keep relocating to avoid destruction. There are abundant anti-aircraft missiles to shoot down medevac aircraft, anti-tank missiles and land mines to destroy ground ambulances.

“Currently, in the combat we’re involved in now, we have dominance over the air and we pretty much can guarantee ourselves ground evacuation and/or air evacuation within this so-called golden hour,” Milley said. “If you are wounded and we get you to doctor in 60 minutes, your probability of survival is in excess of 90 percent.”

“In future combat, that may or may not be true,” Milley said. “Hence Future Vertical Lift [aircraft]…. and we’re uparmoring ground ambulances: That’s the AMPV program.” These are both ways to get casualties out of the combat zone faster without getting shot down or blown up on the way:

The Future Vertical Lift program aims to replace current helicopters with revolutionary new aircraft that are much faster, longer-ranged, and better able to evade Russian or Chinese air defenses. Its FLRAA variant in particular will replace the UH-60 Black Hawk for air assault, transport, and casualty evacuation.
The tank-like Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle is basically an upgraded M2 Bradley troop carrier without the gun turret, which will replace the Vietnam-vintage M113 in a variety of supporting roles. While the Army has cut funding somewhat, the AMPV program will still deliver five variants, two of them medical vehicles: an ambulance and a mobile surgery.
But transporting casualties from the fight to the doctors is only half of the medevac equation. The other half is getting the doctors closer to the fight.

“Equally important,” Milley told the subcommittee, “we want to get the forward surgical teams… as far forward as possible.”

Air Force photo
Health care benefits for troops, military retirees, and their families — or, as in this picture, their pets — are an ever-growing cost to the Defense Department. Congress has directed the Pentagon to streamline the system, and the Army wants to put more medical personnel in combat units.

Mobilizing The Medics

“Today,” Milley explained to me after the hearing, “the medics, the physicians’ assistants, and the doctors, they work on a day to day basis in the MTF [on-base Medical Treatment Facilities], you know, to keep up their skills and stuff.” The base hospitals then loan medical staff to combat units before they deploy, a practice known as the Professional Filler System (PROFIS). The new system will reverse that, Miley said: “On a day to day basis, they’ll be in the tactical units, and then to keep their skills they’re go up to the hospital” as needed.

“It’s called ‘reverse PROFIS,'” Esper added. “The docs and PAs [will be] assigned to the operational units, and they get their repetitions by practicing in [the] MTF.”

Army photo
Army Secretary Mark Esper (left) and Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley (right) testify to Congress.

This may seem a subtle difference — Army medical personnel will still split their time between base hospitals and combat units — but it’s significant. Instead of working for base hospitals and only filling in at combat units when needed, medical personnel will belong to those combat units full-time, responsible first and foremost to operational commanders and regularly available to train for war.

Medical personnel are just one of the key “enablers,” from river-crossing companies to supply trucks, that the Army thinks it’ll need more of, in more units, over a wider area of battlefield than in the past. In future multi-domain operations, Milley told the committee, “it’s highly likely that ground forces will be cut off [and] isolated,” unable to get support from centralized logistical or medical bases in the rear.

Even with more medics at the front, however, more soldiers will be wounded in a future war with Russia or China than in Iraq or Afghanistan, and it will be much harder to get them to safety.

So, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart asked in the hearing, can we count on evacuating soldiers in the golden hour in future conflicts?

“Probably not,” Milley said bluntly. “Evacuating soldiers in high intensity combat against a potential adversary like the Russians or Chinese or even North Korea — first of all the scale and scope of casualties will be significant, really significant, and the ability to evacuate those casualties within sixty minutes….”

The general looked grim. “We’ll try,” he said, “but I’m not guaranteeing.” 

miércoles, 17 de abril de 2019

WHO guideline recommendations on digital interventions for health system strengthening free PDF

WHO guideline recommendations on digital interventions for health system strengthening free PDF 

Publication details

Number of pages124
Publication date2019
LanguagesEnglish
ISBN978-92-4-155050-5

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The key aim of this guideline is to present recommendations based on a critical evaluation of the evidence on emerging digital health interventions that are contributing to health system improvements, based on an assessment of the benefits, harms, acceptability, feasibility, resource use and equity considerations. For the purposes of this version of the guideline, the recommendations examine the extent to which digital health interventions available via mobile devices are able to address health system challenges at different layers of coverage along the pathway to universal health coverage (UHC). By reviewing the evidence of different digital interventions, as well as assessing the risks against comparative options, this guideline aims to equip health policy-makers and other stakeholders with recommendations and implementation considerations for making informed investments into digital health interventions.
This guideline urges readers to recognize that digital health interventions are not a substitute for functioning health systems, and that there are significant limitations to what digital health is able to address.

FEMA Incident Action Planning Guide free PDF

FEMA Incident Action Planning Guide free PDF 
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lunes, 15 de abril de 2019

Incorporating Active Shooter Incident Planning into Health Care Facility Emergency Operations Plans

Incorporating Active Shooter Incident Planning into Health Care Facility Emergency Operations Plans

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Improving Active Shooter/ Hostile Event Response Best Practices and Recommendations for Integrating Law Enforcement, Fire, and EMS (Interagency Board, September 2015)

Fire/Emergency Medical Services Department Operational Considerations and Guide for Active Shooter and Mass Casualty Incidents FEMA

Fire/Emergency Medical Services Department Operational Considerations and Guide for Active Shooter and Mass Casualty Incidents FEMA 
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First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente a dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos

First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente de dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos


Link to download PDF for Free


FREE PDF: First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente a dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos 
Bajar en el enlace http://goo.gl/L7J3LR

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Handbook for EMS Medical Directors by FEMA 2012 pdf

Handbook for EMS Medical Directors by FEMA 2012 pdf 

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UNTIL THE HELP ARRIVE instructor guide Version 2.0 by FEMA Uniformed Services University PPT and PDf

https://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/167623



Until Help Arrives 




for the Until Help Arrives course, designed to teach students basic skills to keep people with life-threatening injuries alive until professional help arrives.






Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS) Protocols Prehospital Emergency Care Protocols Homeland Security free Pdf

Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS) Protocols Prehospital Emergency Care Protocols Homeland Security free Pdf


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jueves, 11 de abril de 2019

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position) Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position)  Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position)
2015 New Hampshire EMS Protocol 4.5 – Spinal Trauma says, “Patients with nausea or vomiting may be placed in a lateral recumbent position. Maintain neutral head position with manual stabilization, padding/pillows, and/or patient’s arm.” The protocol cited above gives us the option to put a patient on their side while maintaining neutral head position in a situation involving nausea or vomiting.
One of the technique is the Norwegian Lateral Trauma Position (LTP). The goal is to transport a trauma patient who is at risk for airway compromise on their side while making reasonable attempts to maintain inline stabilization of the spine and minimize movement.
Don’t do things without authorization from protocols, medical direction, administration – and you know, the legal stuff.
Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

Our practice in EMS for decades has been to strap trauma patients to a rigid longboard in a supine position. This has been thought to protect the spine from further injury. We’ve all gotten pretty good at performing that technique, so we’re comfortable doing it.
Unfortunately that comfort is not shared by the patient. Being secured to a ongboard is not comfortable, it’s painful, and it can cause harm to the patient. Furthermore, there is no evidence that it actually makes a difference in patient outcome. So numerous EMS leaders are creating a sea change in EMS across the USA to stop using rigid longboards in the transport of trauma patients.




In 2014-2015 statewide protocols in several New England states took longboards out of the routine care for patients with potential or actual spine trauma. Anecdotal evidence to this point looks very good. However, did we give up anything useful by stopping the practice of transporting patients strapped to a backboard? Let’s think about airway management for a minute. Picture this, you’re in the back of the ambulance with a patient on a backboard. The patient starts to vomit. A lot. How did you manage that? Your suction device wasn’t going to help in this scenario, so as quickly as you could you undid the straps and rolled the patient and backboard up on its side. Gravity then saved the day.

Same scenario, but now we’re NOT transporting the patient on the backboard. How can you roll this patient up on their side and still maintain alignment of the spine? You probably can’t. However airway and breathing come before disability so you do the best you can.
Our state protocols recognize this potential scenario, and say if you think your patient is at risk for vomiting, you should transport them on their side. The language from the 2015 New Hampshire EMS Protocol 4.5 – Spinal Trauma says, “Patients with nausea or vomiting may be placed in a lateral recumbent position. Maintain neutral head position with manual stabilization, padding/pillows, and/or patient’s arm.”


But, but, but, I can’t do that… a trauma patient HAS to be transported supine. Right?
Dogma is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as “a belief or set of beliefs that is accepted by the members of a group without being questioned or doubted”. Maybe the paradigm of transporting every trauma patient in a supine position is dogma that needs to be reconsidered.
The protocol cited above gives us the option to put a patient on their side while maintaining neutral head position in a situation involving nausea or vomiting. This means proactively doing so before initiating transport. THIS IS A VERY GOOD IDEA. There are clearly patients that you can anticipate that vomiting may be in their near future, and you should proactively take steps to deal with it. If endotracheal intubation with RSI, is in your scope of practice that may be the path you take, but transporting the patient on their side may be just as effective and certainly less invasive.
So again, putting a trauma patient who is at risk for aspiration on their side for transport rather than transporting them supine is a very good idea. However we need to do this in a manner that still maintains an inline stabilization of the spine. How do you do that? Good question.
That’s the challenge this project seeks to address. We would like to have a technique that can accomplish that objective.

The Norwegian Lateral Trauma Position


Fortunately our EMS colleagues in Norway developed and have been utilizing a technique called the Lateral Trauma Position for over a decade, with success. What we seek to do here at the LateralTraumaPosition.org project is to take what the Norwegian EMS system started, and help our EMS colleagues in the USA develop this skill. We hope to provide you with information that can help you form your own clinical opinion and your own clinical practice.
This website includes a video that was produced by EMS providers in Norway illustrating the lateral trauma position (LTP) as they practice it. We’ve also included research studies that attempt to determine the effectiveness and safety of the technique. We believe that our practice in EMS should be based on evidence when possible. The current evidence on the LTP isn’t that strong, no randomized controlled trials. But the evidence is growing. This is thanks to the leadership of Dr. Per Kristian Hyldmo, a flight physician for the helicopter EMS system in Norway. We highly admire his work and hope to follow in his footsteps.
The demonstration videos in this website show the LTP as we have worked out the bugs for us. We wouldn’t presume to say this is the only way to do it. What we do say is that EMS providers need to practice a technique that accomplishes the goal, which is to transport a trauma patient who is at risk for airway compromise on their side while making reasonable attempts to maintain inline stabilization of the spine and minimize movement.
We suggest your team starts with our techniques, modifies the techniques to what works for you, then practice it. A lot.
Listen, for years and years we practiced the PHTLS technique of a standing takedown onto a long backboard, right? Well our evolving practice appears to be doing away with that technique, but we should practice the new LTP technique with the same fervor.
So we ask you to review our “how to” videos, practice them with your crews, modify them to suit your needs and your equipment, and get really good at it. We’d really appreciate your feedback and your modifications of the techniques, including photos and videos.
Finally, understand that we’re not holding ourselves out as experts on the topic of spinal immobilization. We are not researchers. We are simply partners in trying to develop an effective technique in the setting of changing protocols and clinical practices.
Oh, and don’t do things without authorization from protocols, medical direction, administration – you know, the legal stuff.
Be safe,
The LateralTraumaPosition.org Team

Daños de un atropeyo segun la velocidad. Infografia

Daños de un atropeyo segun la velocidad. Infografia
NO SOLO EN SEMANA SANTA DEBES DE SER UN BUEN CONDUCTOR

Ley No. 63-17, de Movilidad, Transporte Terrestre, Tránsito y Seguridad Vial de la República Dominicana. G. O. No. 10875 del 24 de febrero de 2017.

https://emssolutionsint.blogspot.com/2019/01/ley-no-63-17-de-movilidad-transporte.html



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sábado, 6 de abril de 2019

MODELO DE PLAN DE CONTINGENCIA Para Estados Municipios y Delegaciones pdf Gratis 

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Guía para la elaboración de Programas de Protección Civil y Planes de Contingencias. Para Estados, Municipios y Delegaciones. MEXICO pdf Gratis

Guía para la elaboración de Programas de Protección Civil y Planes de Contingencias. Para Estados, Municipios y Delegaciones. MEXICO pdf Gratis

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martes, 2 de abril de 2019

The European guideline on management of major bleeding and coagulopathy following trauma: fifth edition 2019 FREE pdf

The European guideline on management of major bleeding and coagulopathy following trauma: fifth edition 2019 FREE pdf 

The appropriate management of trauma patients with massive bleeding and coagulopathy remains a major challenge in routine clinical practice. A multidisciplinary approach and adherence to evidence-based guidance are key to improving patient outcomes, which could now be shown in the first outcome studies.

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read full articule 


Check if is updated

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig1_HTML.png

Fig. 2
a Summary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. CT, computed tomography; FAST, focused assessment with sonography in trauma; Hb, haemoglobin; PT, prothrombin time. b Summary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. FFP, fresh frozen plasma; Hb, haemoglobin; RBC, red blood cells; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TXA, tranexamic acid. cSummary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. APA, antiplatelet agent; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; FFP, fresh frozen plasma; FXIII, factor XIII; PCC, prothrombin complex concentrate; PT, prothrombin time; rFVIIa, recombinant activated coagulation factor VII; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TXA, tranexamic acid

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2a_HTML.png

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2b_HTML.png

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2c_HTML.png



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