69 results on '"David W. Callaway"'
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2. Improvised Explosive Devices
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Brian Shreve and David W. Callaway
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- 2024
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3. Contributors
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Axel Adams, Clara Affun-Adegbulu, Rakan S. Al-Rasheed, Yasser A. Alaska, Abdulaziz D. Aldawas, Saleh Ali Alesa, George A. Alexander, Abdullah Ahmed Alhadhira, Fahad Saleha Alhajjaj, Hazem H. Alhazmi, Zainab Abdullah Alhussaini, Nawfal Aljerian, Majed Aljohani, Khaldoon H. AlKhaldi, Eyad Alkhattabi, Bryant Allen, Austin Almand, Moza M. Alnoaimi, Mohammad Alotaibi, Evan Avraham Alpert, Yasir A. Alrusayni, Mai Alshammari, Loui K. Alsulimani, Siraj Amanullah, Arian Anderson, David Arastehmanesh, Ali Ardalan, Killiam A. Argote-Araméndiz, Andrew W. Artenstein, Olivia E. Bailey, Russell Baker, Satchit Balsari, Gregory T. Banner, Fermin Barrueto M, Susan A. Bartels, Joshua J. Baugh, Frederic Berg, Vijai Bhola, William Binder, Michelangelo Bortolin, Vincent Bounes, Michael Bouton, Natasha Brown, Frederick M. Burkle, Jr, Lynn Barkley Burnett, Michele M. Burns, Nicholas V. Cagliuso, Sr, John Cahill, David W. Callaway, Duane C. Caneva, Srihari Cattamanchi, Alejandra Caycedo, Edward W. Cetaruk, Sneha Chacko, James C. Chang, Crystal Chiang, David T. Chiu, Gregory R. Ciottone, Jonathan Peter Ciottone, Melissa A. Ciottone, Robert A. Ciottone, Robert G. Ciottone, Vigen G. Ciottone, Alexander Clark, Jonathan Clark, Sean P. Conley, Joanne Cono, Arthur Cooper, Scott B. Cormier, Michael F. Court, Cord W. Cunningham, Fabrice Czarnecki, Supriya Davis, Timothy E. Davis, Gerard DeMers, Sharon Dilling, Ahmadreza Djalali, Timothy Donahoe, Joseph Donahue, Caleb Dresser, Jason Dylik, Benjamin Easter, Alexander Eastman, Laura Ebbeling, Chigozie Emetarom, Nir Eyal, Andrew J. Eyre, David J. Freeman, Franklin D. Friedman, Christie Fritz, Frederick Fung, Fiona E. Gallahue, Stephanie Chow Garbern, Mark E. Gebhart, William A. Gluckman, Craig Goolsby, Robert M. Gougelet, Fredrik Granholm, P. Gregg Greenough, Jennifer O. Grimes, Steve Grosse, Shamai A. Grossman, John T. Groves Jr, Tee L. Guidotti, George Guo, Sarah Haessler, Matthew M. Hall, John W. Hardin, Mason Harrell, Alexander Hart, MD, Melissa Harvey, Attila J. Hertelendy, PhD, Nishanth S. Hiremath, Jordan Hitchens, Christopher P. Holstege, Simon T. Horne, Steven Horng, Amer Hosin, Hans R. House, Pier Luigi Ingrassia, Fadi S. Issa, Irving 'Jake' Jacoby, Rajnish Jaiswal, Gregory Jay, J. Lee Jenkins, Josh W. Joseph, Shane Kappler, Mark E. Keim, Julie Kelman, Andrew R. Ketterer, Anas A. Khan, Ramu Kharel, Chetan U. Kharod, Thomas D. Kirsch, Anita Knopov, Max Kravitz, J. Austin Lee, Jay Lemery, Evan L. Leventhal, Jesse Loughlin, Stephanie Ludy, Brian J. Maguire, Selwyn E. Mahon, Paul M. Maniscalco, Philip Manners, Leonard Jay Marcus, Colton Margus, Taha M. Masri, Jeff Matthews, Sean D. McKay, Zeke J. McKinney, Robert K. McLellan, Eric J. McNulty, Faroukh Mehkri, Mandana Mehta, Rebecca A. Mendelsohn, Ofer Merin, Andrew Milsten, Dale M. Molé, Michael Sean Molloy, Ilaria Morelli, Jerry L. Mothershead, John Mulhern, Nicole F. Mullendore, Nicholas J. Musisca, Sonya Naganathan, Larry A. Nathanson, Erica L. Nelson, Lewis S. Nelson, Bradford A. Newbury, Kimberly Newbury, Ansley O’Neill, Robert Obernier, Jacopo M. Olagnero, Leonie Oostrom-Shah, Catherine Y. Ordun, Scott Parazynski, Andrew J. Park, Robert Partridge, Jeffrey S, James P. Phillips, Emily Pinter, David P. Polatty IV, Patrick Popieluszko, William Porcaro, Lawrence Proano, Peter B. Pruitt, Moiz Qureshi, Luca Ragazzoni, Murtaza Rashid, Paul Patrick Rega, Michael J. Reilly, Marc C. Restuccia, James J. Rifino, Paul M. Robben, Joy L. Rosenblatt, Kevin M. Ryan, Heather Rybasack-Smith, Richard James Salway, Daniel Samo, Leon D. Sanchez, Shawn M. Sanford, Ritu R. Sarin, Deesha Sarma, Jesse Schacht, Valarie Schwind, Geoffrey L. Shapiro, Joshua Sheehan, Brian Shreve, Grigor Simonyan, Devin M. Smith, E. Reed Smith, MD, Jack E. Smith, MA, Montray Smith, Peter B. Smulowitz, Angela M. Snyder, Joshua J. Solano, Bryan A. Stenson, Charles Stewart, M. Kathleen Stewart, Patrick Sullivan, Jared S. Supple, Derrick Tin, Jonathan Harris Valente, Kathryn M. Vear, P.R. Vidyalakshmi, Faith Vilas, Gary M. Vilke, Janna H. Villano, Amalia Voskanyan, C. James Watson, Nancy Weber, Scott G. Weiner, Brielle Weinstein, Eric S. Weinstein, Jordan R. Werner, Roy Karl Werner, MD, James D. Whitledge, Sage W. Wiener, Lauren Wiesner, Kenneth A. Williams, Robyn Wing, Richard E. Wolfe, Wendy Hin-Wing Wong, Robert Woolard, Prasit Wuthisuthimethawee, and Nadine A. Youssef
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- 2024
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4. Integrated Response to Terrorist Attacks
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David W. Callaway, E. Reed Smith, and Geoffrey L. Shapiro
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Terrorism ,Business ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,computer - Published
- 2024
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5. Critical Concepts for COVID-19 Mass Vaccination Site Operations
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Scott A Goldberg, Sujal Mandavia, Eric Goralnick, Michelle B. Bass, Daniel Resnick-Ault, David W Callaway, and Rodrigo Martinez
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Communicable disease ,Emergency management ,mass vaccination ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Staffing ,COVID-19 ,emergency preparedness ,Public relations ,immunization ,Vaccination ,Concepts in Disaster Medicine ,Blueprint ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,business - Abstract
Mass vaccination campaigns have been used effectively to limit the impact of communicable disease on public health. However, the scale of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccination campaign is unprecedented. Mass vaccination sites consolidate resources and experience into a single entity and are essential to achieving community (“herd”) immunity rapidly, efficiently, and equitably. Health care systems, local and regional public health entities, emergency medical services, and private organizations can rapidly come together to solve problems and achieve success. As medical directors at several mass vaccination sites across the United States, we describe key mass vaccination site concepts, including site selection, operational models, patient flow, inventory management, staffing, technology, reporting, medical oversight, communication, and equity. Lessons learned from experience operating a diverse group of mass vaccination sites will help inform not only sites operating during the current pandemic, but also may serve as a blueprint for future outbreaks of highly infectious communicable disease.
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- 2021
6. Implementation of Drive-Through Testing for COVID-19 With Community Paramedics
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Jeremy N. Driscoll, Stephanie Murphy, S. Tyler Constantine, and David W Callaway
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Male ,030231 tropical medicine ,mobile integrated health ,Staffing ,Allied Health Personnel ,Physical examination ,Disease ,Concepts in Disaster Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID-19 Testing ,Pandemic ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Personal protective equipment ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,pandemic ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,drive-through testing ,Paramedicine ,medicine.disease ,Test (assessment) ,Female ,Medical emergency ,people ,business ,people.professional_field ,community paramedicine - Abstract
Objective:In this manuscript, we discuss the implementation and deployment of mobile integrated health and community paramedicine (MIH/CP) testing sites to provide screening, testing, and community outreach during the first months of the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the metropolitan region of Charlotte, North Carolina. This program addresses the need for an agile testing strategy during the current pandemic. We disclose the number of patients evaluated as “persons under investigation” and the proportion with positive severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS CoV-2) results from these sites. We describe how the programs were applied to patient care and include considerations on how additional staffing, scalability, and flexibility of these services may be applied to future patient and health care crises.Methods:This is a descriptive report of the implementation of MIH/CP test sites in our health care system’s early response to the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Retrospective data on the number of patients and their associated demographics are reported here as raw data. No statistical analysis was performed.Results:Between March 15, 2020, and April 15, 2020, our 6 MIH/CP test sites evaluated 4342 patients. Of these, 401 patients (9.2%) had positive test results, 62.8% of whom were women. The estimated duration of each patient encounter under investigation was 3 to 5 minutes. The paramedics were able to perform a brief history, specific physical examination, and screening for signs of hypoxemic respiratory failure. There were no cases of accidental exposure or failure of personal protective equipment for the MIH/CP paramedics.Conclusions:In our health care system, we pivoted the traditional MIH/CP model to rapidly initiate remote drive-through testing for COVID-19 in pre-screened individuals. This model allowed us to test patients with suspected COVID-19 patients away from traditional health care sites and mitigate exposure to health care workers and other patients.
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- 2021
7. Risk and the Republican National Convention: Application of the Novel COVID-19 Operational Risk Assessment
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Lisa Rentz, Kevin Staley, Crystal Watson, Lucia Mullen, David W Callaway, Jeff Runge, and Michael Stanford
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Republican national convention ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,risk management ,Risk Assessment ,Concepts in Disaster Medicine ,Convention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mass gathering ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pandemics ,Risk management ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Mass gathering medicine ,mass gathering medicine ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Public relations ,Business operations ,Software deployment ,business ,Risk assessment ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization broadly categorize mass gathering events as high risk for amplification of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) spread in a community due to the nature of respiratory diseases and the transmission dynamics. However, various measures and modifications can be put in place to limit or reduce the risk of further spread of COVID-19 for the mass gathering. During this pandemic, the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security produced a risk assessment and mitigation tool for decision-makers to assess SARS-CoV-2 transmission risks that may arise as organizations and businesses hold mass gatherings or increase business operations: The JHU Operational Toolkit for Businesses Considering Reopening or Expanding Operations in COVID-19 (Toolkit). This article describes the deployment of a data-informed, risk-reduction strategy that protects local communities, preserves local health-care capacity, and supports democratic processes through the safe execution of the Republican National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina. The successful use of the Toolkit and the lessons learned from this experience are applicable in a wide range of public health settings, including school reopening, expansion of public services, and even resumption of health-care delivery.
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- 2021
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8. Team Rubicon Medical Response to Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas
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Madi Yogman, Jordan Selzer, David W Callaway, and Andrew J Bouland
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Emergency Medical Services ,Organizations ,Government ,Atlantic hurricane ,History ,Bahamas ,Cyclonic Storms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medical care ,Disaster Medicine ,World health ,Humans ,Medical team ,Socioeconomics ,Disaster medicine ,Landfall - Abstract
On September 1, 2019, Hurricane Dorian made landfall as a category 5 hurricane on Great Abaco Island, Bahamas. Hurricane Dorian matched the “Labor Day” hurricane of 1935 as the strongest recorded Atlantic hurricane to make landfall with maximum sustained winds of 185 miles/h.1 At the request of the Government of the Bahamas, Team Rubicon activated a World Health Organization Type 1 Mobile Emergency Medical Team and responded to Great Abaco Island. The team provided medical care and reconnaissance of medical clinics on the island and surrounding cays…
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- 2019
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9. Implementation of Drive-through Testing for COVID-19 using an External Emergency Department Triage
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Benjamin Morel, Catherine Waggy, Stephanie O'Bryon, Keegan Bradley, Kathy Barnard, Tyler Constantine, and David W Callaway
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Adult ,Male ,external emergency department ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Isolation (health care) ,Adolescent ,infectious diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID-19 Testing ,Pandemic ,North Carolina ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Emergency department triage ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Selected Topics: Prehospital Care ,COVID-19 ,drive-through testing ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Medical evaluation ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,triage - Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, healthcare systems in many regions of the country were being overwhelmed by large numbers of patients needing care. In this paper, we discuss use of an external emergency department (ED) site by a hospital system based in Charlotte, North Carolina to address concerns of a local surge similar to those seen around the country. OBJECTIVE: Demonstrate how expansion of ED facilities can increase efficiency of care for patients while also improving safety for clinicians, staff, and non-infected patients. METHODS: We describe development and implementation of our external ED drive-through testing sites during the COVID-19 pandemic. We collected data from three external ED sites in the Atrium Health system between March 15th and April 15th, 2020. Patients were included if they were seen at one of the sites and tested for COVID-19. There were no exclusion criteria. We analyzed the data to identify any differences in patient demographics between sites. RESULTS: We saw 580 patients across the three sites, 302 of whom met criteria for COVID-19 testing. The majority of patients tested were Caucasian females. The majority who tested positive, however, were males. Thirteen patients were redirected into the hospital ED for further medical evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: External expansion of the ED is an important strategy that can allow hospitals to accommodate potentially infectious patients while maintaining appropriate isolation and rapid throughput. Proper implementation of the right system to meet hospital-specific needs can prove effective for the healthcare system.
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- 2020
10. Evaluation of an Online Educational Intervention to Increase Knowledge and Self-efficacy in Disaster Responders and Critical Care Transporters Caring for Individuals with Developmental Disabilities
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Kathleen S Jordan, Zachariah S Edinger, David W Callaway, and Kelly Powers
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Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Developmental Disabilities ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pilot Projects ,Vulnerable Populations ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Vulnerable population ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Self-efficacy ,New Jersey ,Emergency management ,business.industry ,Emergency Responders ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Positive patient ,Self Efficacy ,Feeling ,Family medicine ,Clinical Competence ,Public health preparedness ,business ,Psychology ,Disaster medicine - Abstract
ObjectiveDisability-related education is essential for disaster responders and critical care transporters to ensure positive patient outcomes. This pilot study evaluated the effect of an online educational intervention on disaster responders and critical care transporters’ knowledge of and feelings of self-efficacy about caring for individuals with developmental disabilities.MethodsA 1-group, pretest-posttest, quasi-experimental design was used. A convenience sample of 33 disaster responders and critical care transporters participated.ResultsOf the 33 participants, only 24% had received prior education on this topic, and 88% stated that such education would be beneficial to their care of patients. Nineteen participants completed both the pretest and posttest, and overall performance on knowledge items improved from 66% correct to 81% correct. Self-efficacy for caring for developmentally disabled individuals improved, with all 10 items showing a statistically significant improvement.ConclusionOnline education is recommended to improve the knowledge and self-efficacy of disaster responders and critical care transporters who care for this vulnerable population after disasters and emergencies. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2019;13:677–681)
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- 2019
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11. A review of the landscape: Challenges and gaps in trauma response to civilian high threat mass casualty incidents
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David W Callaway
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Insurgency ,Trauma response ,business.industry ,Resuscitation ,Emergency Responders ,Disaster Planning ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Mass violence ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Criminology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Trauma care ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mass-casualty incident ,Transportation of Patients ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency response ,Preparedness ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Healthcare system - Abstract
The ultimate goal of the emergency response and trauma system is to reduce potentially preventable death from trauma. Tremendous advances in trauma care emerged from the past 15 years of United States' combat engagements around the globe. Unfortunately, combat and insurgency tactics have also metastasized to the civilian world, resulting in increasingly complex and dynamic acts of intentional mass violence. These high threat active violent incidents (AVIs) pose significant preparedness, response, and clinical care challenges to the civilian healthcare systems. Currently, there are several operational and policy gaps that limit the successful preparedness and response to AVIs and dynamic MCIs in the United States.
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- 2018
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12. Airway Management With Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation
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Wayne, Papalski, John, Siedler, and David W, Callaway
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Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Respiration, Artificial - Abstract
Noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation (NPPV) is a form of ventilatory support that does not require the placement of an advanced airway. The authors discuss the use of NPPV on patients who will likely benefit. The use of NPPV has reduced the need for patients to require intubation and/or mechanical ventilation in some cases, as well as benefits.
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- 2022
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13. Defining a Research Agenda for Layperson Prehospital Hemorrhage Control A Consensus Statement
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Scott A Goldberg, Craig Goolsby, Kevin R. Ward, Elzerie de Jager, Brian J. Eastridge, Richard C. Hunt, Conor L. Evans, Edward J. Caterson, Alexander L. Eastman, Mark L. Gestring, Tarsicio Uribe-Leitz, John B. Holcomb, Ali Salim, Chibuike Ezeibe, Dan Hanfling, Ronald M. Stewart, Lenworth M. Jacobs, Eric Goralnick, Joan José Meléndez Lugo, Gezzer Ortega, Peter T. Pons, Habeeba Park, Tomas Andriotti, Daniel Ospina-Delgado, Niteesh K. Choudhry, Robert Niskanen, Eileen M. Bulger, Todd E. Rasmussen, Russ S Kotwal, Frank K. Butler, Justin C. McCarty, Stacy Shackelfold, Marianne Gausche-Hill, Mamta Swaroop, E. Reed Smith, Patrick O’Neill, Joel S. Weissman, Muhammad Ali Chaudhary, Sean M Kivlehan, Jon R. Krohmer, Jeremy Brown, Matthew J. Levy, Jonathan L. Epstein, Erik Prytz, Nomi C Levy-Carrick, David R. King, Juan P. Herrera-Escobar, Carl-Oscar Jonson, Robert Riviello, Matthew D. Neal, David W Callaway, Molly P. Jarman, David P. Mooney, Michael R. Davis, Michael A. Remley, Adil H. Haider, and Erin G. Andrade
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Hälso- och sjukvårdsorganisation, hälsopolitik och hälsoekonomi ,Emergency Medical Services ,Government ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,MEDLINE ,Hemorrhage ,General Medicine ,Health Care Service and Management, Health Policy and Services and Health Economy ,Military medicine ,Likert scale ,Layperson ,Nursing ,Research Design ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Epidemiology ,Global health ,medicine ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Psychology ,Health policy - Abstract
Importance Trauma is the leading cause of death for US individuals younger than 45 years, and uncontrolled hemorrhage is a major cause of trauma mortality. The US military’s medical advancements in the field of prehospital hemorrhage control have reduced battlefield mortality by 44%. However, despite support from many national health care organizations, no integrated approach to research has been made regarding implementation, epidemiology, education, and logistics of prehospital hemorrhage control by layperson immediate responders in the civilian sector. Objective To create a national research agenda to help guide future work for prehospital hemorrhage control by laypersons. Evidence Review The 2-day, in-person, National Stop the Bleed (STB) Research Consensus Conference was conducted on February 27 to 28, 2019, to identify and achieve consensus on research gaps. Participants included (1) subject matter experts, (2) professional society–designated leaders, (3) representatives from the federal government, and (4) representatives from private foundations. Before the conference, participants were provided a scoping review on layperson prehospital hemorrhage control. A 3-round modified Delphi consensus process was conducted to determine high-priority research questions. The top items, with median rating of 8 or more on a Likert scale of 1 to 9 points, were identified and became part of the national STB research agenda. Findings Forty-five participants attended the conference. In round 1, participants submitted 487 research questions. After deduplication and sorting, 162 questions remained across 5 a priori–defined themes. Two subsequent rounds of rating generated consensus on 113 high-priority, 27 uncertain-priority, and 22 low-priority questions. The final prioritized research agenda included the top 24 questions, including 8 for epidemiology and effectiveness, 4 for materials, 9 for education, 2 for global health, and 1 for health policy. Conclusions and Relevance The National STB Research Consensus Conference identified and prioritized a national research agenda to support laypersons in reducing preventable deaths due to life-threatening hemorrhage. Investigators and funding agencies can use this agenda to guide their future work and funding priorities. Funding Agencies|Gillian Reny Stepping Strong Center for Trauma Innovation; National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health
- Published
- 2020
14. Emergency Preparedness Aspects of DCR for Civilian Mass Casualty Scenarios
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David W Callaway, Reed Smith, and Sean M. Fox
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Emergency management ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Damage control resuscitation ,Mass Casualty ,medicine.disease ,Mass-casualty incident ,Preparedness ,medicine ,Community approach ,Medical emergency ,Trauma resuscitation ,business - Abstract
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) and remote damage control resuscitation (RDCR) are key components of effective modern trauma resuscitation. Traumatic Mass Casualty Incidents (T-MCI) create unique operational and clinical challenges for effective implementation of the core tenants of DCR principles. Proper readiness and response requires a whole of community approach to the challenges based on tiered application of the Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (TECC) guidelines in the prehospital, first receiver facility, and trauma center environments. Mitigation, preparedness, and planning activities are critical to ensuring robust blood product availability, comprehensive patient distribution protocols, and continuity of operations plans.
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- 2019
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15. Operational and Medical Management of Explosive and Blast Incidents
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David W. Callaway, Jonathan L. Burstein, David W. Callaway, and Jonathan L. Burstein
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- Blast injuries--Surgery, Blast injuries--Treatment
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This book provides a comprehensive overview of the medical and operational management of blast and explosive incidents affecting civilian populations. It incorporates global lessons learned from first responders, emergency medicine providers, surgeons, intensivists, and military specialists with deep experience in handling blast injuries from point of injury through rehabilitation. The book begins with background and introductory information on blast physics, explosion types, frequency, and perspectives from the military. This is followed by a section on prehospital management focusing on medical and trauma responses, triage, psychological consequences, and operational considerations. It then examines the roles of the emergency department and ICU with chapters on planning and training, surge capacity, resilience, management of common injury types, contamination, and ventilator strategies. The next section covers surgical treatment of a varietyof blast injuries such as thoracoabdominal, extremity and vascular, and orthopedic injuries. The book then discusses medical treatment of various injury patterns including lung, abdominal, extremity, and traumatic brain injury. The final section of the book covers post-hospital considerations such as rehabilitation, mental health, and community resilience. Throughout, case studies of recent incidents provide real-life examples of operational and medical management.Operational and Medical Management of Explosive and Blast Incidents is an essential resource for physicians and related professionals, residents, nurses, and medical students in emergency medicine, traumatic surgery, intensive care medicine, and public health as well as civilian and military EMS providers.
- Published
- 2020
16. Building community resilience to dynamic mass casualty incidents
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David W. Callaway, Joshua P Bobko, Geoff Shapiro, E. Reed Smith, Kristina Anderson, Sean McKay, and Babak Sarani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Delphi Technique ,Community participation ,Delphi method ,Disaster Planning ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,Residence Characteristics ,First Aid ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Medicine ,Cooperative Behavior ,Resilience (network) ,Health Education ,Community resilience ,business.industry ,Community Participation ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Resilience, Psychological ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Mass-casualty incident ,Emergency medicine ,Surgery ,Cooperative behavior ,Medical emergency ,business ,First aid - Published
- 2016
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17. Case Report: Life Saving Application of Commercial Tourniquet in Pediatric Extremity Hemorrhage
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Tony Hannon, Andrew Puciaty, Josh Robertson, David W Callaway, and Sarah E. Fabiano
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Male ,Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hemorrhage ,Wounds, Penetrating ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Emergency Nursing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Humans ,Life saving ,Child ,Intensive care medicine ,Cause of death ,Service (business) ,Tourniquet ,business.industry ,Extremities ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Tourniquets ,equipment and supplies ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,body regions ,Emergency Medicine ,Professional association ,Medical emergency ,business ,Pediatric trauma - Abstract
Hemorrhage is the leading preventable cause of death in civilian and military trauma. Recent data from the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan suggest that early and aggressive tourniquet utilization is a safe and effective way to dramatically reduce mortality from extremity hemorrhage. As a result, prehospital tourniquet use is now endorsed by a majority of professional emergency medicine, emergency medical service and trauma professional societies. However, there currently exists scant evidence supporting the efficacy of commercially available tourniquets in controlling extremity hemorrhage in pediatric trauma patients.
- Published
- 2017
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18. Intramuscular Tranexamic Acid in Tactical and Combat Settings
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Erik N Vu, Wilson C Wan, Titus C Yeung, and David W Callaway
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Evidence-Based Medicine ,Tranexamic Acid ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,First Aid ,Humans ,War-Related Injuries ,General Medicine ,Shock, Hemorrhagic ,Military Medicine ,Injections, Intramuscular ,Antifibrinolytic Agents - Abstract
Uncontrolled hemorrhage remains a leading cause of preventable death in tactical and combat settings. Alternate routes of delivery of tranexamic acid (TXA), an adjunct in the management of hemorrhagic shock, are being studied. A working group for the Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care reviewed the available evidence on the potential role for intramuscular (IM) administration of TXA in nonhospital settings as soon as possible from the point of injury.EMBASE and MEDLINE/PubMed databases were sequentially searched by medical librarians for evidence of TXA use in the following contexts and/or using the following keywords: prehospital, trauma, hemorrhagic shock, optimal timing, optimal dose, safe volume, incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE), IM bioavailability.A total of 183 studies were reviewed. The strength of the available data was variable, generally weak in quality, and included laboratory research, case reports, retrospective observational reviews, and few prospective studies. Current volume and concentrations of available formulations of TXA make it, in theory, amenable to IM injection. Current bestpractice guidelines for large-volume injection (i.e., 5mL) support IM administration in four locations in the adult human body. One case series suggests complete bioavailability of IM TXA in healthy patients. Data are lacking on the efficacy and safety of IM TXA in hemorrhagic shock.There is currently insufficient evidence to support a strong recommendation for or against IM administration of TXA in the combat setting; however, there is an abundance of literature demonstrating efficacy and safety of TXA use in a broad range of patient populations. Balancing the available data and risk- benefit ratio, IM TXA should be considered a viable treatment option for tactical and combat applications. Additional studies should focus on the optimal dose and bioavailability of IM dosing of patients in hemorrhagic shock, with assessment of potential downstream sequelae.
- Published
- 2018
19. Law Enforcement-applied Tourniquets: A Case Series of Life-saving Interventions
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Matthew D. Sztajnkrycer, David W Callaway, and Joshua Robertson
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Emergency Medical Services ,Tourniquet ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Psychological intervention ,Law enforcement ,Extremities ,Hemorrhage ,Emergency department ,Tourniquets ,Emergency Nursing ,medicine.disease ,Law Enforcement ,Epidemiology ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Medical emergency ,Life saving ,business ,Tourniquet application - Abstract
Although the epidemiology of civilian trauma is distinct from that encountered in combat, in both settings, extremity hemorrhage remains a major preventable cause of potential mortality. The current paper describes the largest case series in the literature in which police officers arriving prior to emergency medical services applied commercially available field tourniquets to civilian victims of violent trauma. Although all 3 patients with vascular injury arrived at the receiving emergency department in extremis, they were successfully resuscitated and survived to discharge without major morbidity. While this outcome is likely multifactorial and highlights the exceptional care delivered by the modern trauma system, tourniquet application appears to have kept critically injured patients alive long enough to reach definitive trauma care. No patient had a tourniquet-related complication. This case series suggests that law enforcement officers can effectively identify indications for tourniquets and rapidly apply such life-saving interventions.
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- 2014
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20. Time for a Revolution: Smart Energy and Microgrid Use in Disaster Response
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Dominique Lempereur, A.J. Rossman, Peter McCahill, Kathleen Kaney, Doug Swanson, Erin Noste, and David W Callaway
- Subjects
Engineering ,Emergency management ,Energy management ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Civil Defense ,Poison control ,Disaster Planning ,Disaster Medicine ,Renewable energy ,Transport engineering ,Electric Power Supplies ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Models, Organizational ,Energy independence ,North Carolina ,Rescue Work ,Microgrid ,Natural disaster ,business ,Disaster medicine - Abstract
Modern health care and disaster response are inextricably linked to high volume, reliable, quality power. Disasters place major strain on energy infrastructure in affected communities. Advances in renewable energy and microgrid technology offer the potential to improve mobile disaster medical response capabilities. However, very little is known about the energy requirements of and alternative power sources in disaster response. A gap analysis of the energy components of modern disaster response reveals multiple deficiencies. The MED-1 Green Project has been executed as a multiphase project designed to identify energy utilization inefficiencies, decrease demands on diesel generators, and employ modern energy management strategies to expand operational independence. This approach, in turn, allows for longer deployments in potentially more austere environments and minimizes the unit's environmental footprint. The ultimate goal is to serve as a proof of concept for other mobile medical units to create strategies for energy independence. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2014;0:1–8)
- Published
- 2014
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21. Be The Help
- Author
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David W Callaway, E. Reed Smith, and Geoff Shapiro
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Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
22. Ablation Measurements and Analysis of Solid Carbon Dioxide Models at Mach 3
- Author
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Mark F. Reeder, Robert B. Greendyke, David W. Callaway, and Ryan Gosse
- Subjects
Stagnation temperature ,Materials science ,Aerospace Engineering ,Mechanics ,Laser ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,Mach number ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,Range (aeronautics) ,Fluid dynamics ,symbols ,Stagnation pressure ,Boiler blowdown ,Simulation ,Wind tunnel - Abstract
Three-dimensional ablation measurements, acquired using solid carbon dioxide for the model material and carried out at Mach 3, are compared to predictions of a computational model that incorporates fluid dynamics and solid-body response. Models were formed in situ by mounting three-dimensional printed molds on a hollow sting, through which liquid carbon dioxide flowed. The blowdown wind tunnel, operating with a vacuum tank connected to its outlet, provided stagnation pressures through a wide range (6.0 to 45 psia) while maintaining a nearly constant stagnation temperature for all tests (∼295 K). Three synchronized high-speed cameras captured the model recession from different angles while multiple low-power lasers projected structured arrays of dots onto the otherwise visually uniform model. Commercially available software was applied to quantify the recession data. As expected, recession rates were largest at the nose of each model and increased with stagnation pressure. A quantitative comparison of the...
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
23. Medical Provider Ballistic Protection at Active Shooter Events
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Jason P Stopyra, William P Bozeman, David W Callaway, James Winslow, Henderson D McGinnis, Justin Sempsrott, Lisa Evans-Taylor, and Roy L Alson
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Technicians ,Protective Clothing ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,General Medicine - Abstract
There is some controversy about whether ballistic protective equipment (body armor) is required for medical responders who may be called to respond to active shooter mass casualty incidents. In this article, we describe the ongoing evolution of recommendations to optimize medical care to injured victims at such an incident. We propose that body armor is not mandatory for medical responders participating in a rapid-response capacity, in keeping with the Hartford Consensus and Arlington Rescue Task Force models. However, we acknowledge that the development and implementation of these programs may benefit from the availability of such equipment as one component of risk mitigation. Many police agencies regularly retire body armor on a defined time schedule before the end of its effective service life. Coordination with law enforcement may allow such retired body armor to be available to other public safety agencies, such as fire and emergency medical services, providing some degree of ballistic protection to medical responders at little or no cost during the rare mass casualty incident. To provide visual demonstration of this concept, we tested three "retired" ballistic vests with ages ranging from 6 to 27 years. The vests were shot at close range using police-issue 9mm, .40 caliber, .45 caliber, and 12-gauge shotgun rounds. Photographs demonstrate that the vests maintained their ballistic protection and defeated all of these rounds.
- Published
- 2016
24. Don't Let the Word 'Myopic' Blind You
- Author
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David W Callaway
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Hemorrhage ,Public Policy ,Wounds, Gunshot ,General Medicine ,United States - Published
- 2016
25. Bystander Response. Leveraging bystanders as medical force multipliers in high-threat incidents
- Author
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E Reed, Smith, Joshua P, Bobko, Geoffrey S, Shapiro, and David W, Callaway
- Subjects
Volunteers ,Emergency Medical Services ,Workforce ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Wounds and Injuries ,Emergency Treatment - Published
- 2016
26. Translating Tactical Combat Casualty Care Lessons Learned to the High-Threat Civilian Setting: Tactical Emergency Casualty Care and the Hartford Consensus
- Author
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David W Callaway
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Process improvement ,Public policy ,Wilderness Medicine ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Hemorrhage ,Military medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Military Medicine ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Combat casualty ,medicine.disease ,Trauma care ,United States ,Emergency Medicine ,Hemorrhage control ,Wilderness medicine ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Combat operations necessitate bold thought and afford the opportunity to rapidly evolve and improve trauma care. The development and maturation of Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) is an important example of a critical process improvement strategy that reduced mortality in high-threat combat-related trauma. The Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC) adapted the lessons of TCCC to the civilian high-threat environment and provided important all-hazards response principles for austere, dynamic, and resource-limited environments. The Hartford Consensus mobilized the resources of the American College of Surgeons to drive public policy regarding a more singular focus: hemorrhage control. The combined efforts of C-TECC and Hartford Consensus have helped redefine the practice of trauma care in high-threat scenarios across the United States.
- Published
- 2016
27. Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care. Spring Update
- Author
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Geoff, Shapiro, Reed, Smith, and David W, Callaway
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Advisory Committees ,First Aid ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Guidelines as Topic ,Wounds, Gunshot ,Congresses as Topic - Published
- 2016
28. Integration of Tactical Emergency Casualty Care Into the National Tactical Emergency Medical Support Competency Domains
- Author
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Andre, Pennardt, David W, Callaway, Rich, Kamin, Craig, Llewellyn, Geoff, Shapiro, Philip A, Carmona, and Richard B, Schwartz
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Law Enforcement ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Clinical Competence - Abstract
Tactical emergency medical support (TEMS) is a critical component of the out-of-hospital response to domestic high-threat incidents such as hostage scenarios, warrant service, active shooter or violent incidents, terrorist attacks, and other intentional mass casualty-producing acts. From its grass-roots inception in the form of medical support of select law enforcement special weapons and tactics (SWAT) units in the 1980s, the TEMS subspecialty of prehospital care has rapidly grown and evolved over the past 40 years. The National TEMS Initiative and Council (NTIC) competencies and training objectives are the only published recommendations of their kind and offer the opportunity for national standardization of TEMS training programs and a future accreditation process. Building on the previous work of the NTIC and the creation of acknowledged competency domains for TEMS and the acknowledged civilian translation of TCCC by the Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC), the Joint Review Committee (JRC) has created an opportunity to bring forward the work in a form that could be operationally useful in an all-hazards and whole of community format.
- Published
- 2016
29. Disaster Mobile Health Technology: Lessons from Haiti
- Author
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Elizabeth Cote, Seth Moulton, Larry A. Nathanson, Amado Alejandro Báez, Christopher R. Peabody, Ari Hoffman, and David W Callaway
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Male ,Telemedicine ,Medical Records Systems, Computerized ,Health information technology ,Patient Tracking ,Emergency Nursing ,First responder ,Facility management ,Nursing ,Earthquakes ,Humans ,Medicine ,mHealth ,Multiple Trauma ,business.industry ,Health technology ,Relief Work ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,Haiti ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,Cell Phone - Abstract
IntroductionMobile health (mHealth) technology can play a critical role in improving disaster victim tracking, triage, patient care, facility management, and theater-wide decision-making.ProblemTo date, no disaster mHealth application provides responders with adequate capabilities to function in an austere environment.MethodsThe Operational Medicine Institute (OMI) conducted a qualitative trial of a modified version of the off-the-shelf application iChart at the Fond Parisien Disaster Rescue Camp during the large-scale response to the January 12, 2010 earthquake in Haiti.ResultsThe iChart mHealth system created a patient log of 617 unique entries used by on-the-ground medical providers and field hospital administrators to facilitate provider triage, improve provider handoffs, and track vulnerable populations such as unaccompanied minors, pregnant women, traumatic orthopedic injuries and specified infectious diseases.ConclusionThe trial demonstrated that even a non-disaster specific application with significant programmatic limitations was an improvement over existing patient tracking and facility management systems. A unified electronic medical record and patient tracking system would add significant value to first responder capabilities in the disaster response setting.Callaway DW, Peabody CR, Hoffman A, Cote E, Moulton S, Baez AA, Nathanson L. Disaster mobile health technology: lessons from Haiti. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2012;27(2):1-5.
- Published
- 2012
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30. Case Presentation: Creation and Utilization of a Novel Field Improvised Autologous Transfusion System in a Combat Casualty
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Tyler Scarborough, Michael Turconi, and David W Callaway
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Regarding the ‘Joint statement from the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS COT) and the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) regarding the clinical use of Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta (REBOA)’
- Author
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Kathryn West, Erin Noste, Andy Godwin, David W Callaway, Michael A. Gibbs, David Caro, Bryant Allen, and M. Austin Johnson
- Subjects
Trauma patient ,Resuscitative thoracotomy ,business.industry ,Psychological intervention ,Vascular access ,Emergency department ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Practice ,Catheter ,Balloon occlusion ,Medicine ,trauma/critical care ,Surgery ,Medical emergency ,business ,Letter to the Editor - Abstract
Trauma remains a leading cause of mortality in the USA.1 In 2016, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) and the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma were major stakeholders in the National Academy of Science, Engineering and Medicine report that suggested there are up to 30 000 preventable deaths from trauma annually in the USA, many from uncontrolled hemorrhage.2 As the front-line provider, the emergency physician (EP) must receive extensive training in the care of traumatically injured patients. Several procedural interventions, including the performance of an emergency department resuscitative thoracotomy (EDRT), ultrasound, and arterial catheter insertion, are therefore included as part of the model of clinical practice for emergency medicine (EM).3 Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA)4 has emerged as a potential technique for controlling previously lethal truncal hemorrhage in the extremis trauma patient. Advances in ultrasound and catheter technology have simplified placement, decreasing the need for postplacement vascular access site repair. Programs to educate providers in the use of REBOA have emerged, but have been designed exclusively for surgeons with limited ability for EP participation. We strongly think that with appropriate training, EPs can develop the …
- Published
- 2018
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32. A Nineteen-Year-Old Girl with Palpitations
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David W Callaway, Daniel C. McGillicuddy, Carrie Tibbles, and Diana Felton
- Subjects
Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Giant Cells ,Electrocardiography ,Myocarditis ,Tachycardia, Ventricular ,Emergency Medicine ,Palpitations ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,Girl ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Anti-Arrhythmia Agents ,media_common - Published
- 2010
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33. Needle Thoracostomy for decompression of Tension Pneumothorax
- Author
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Cragin Greene and David W Callaway
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Decompression ,Ultrasound ,Axillary lines ,Needle decompression ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,030230 surgery ,Thoracostomy ,Tension pneumothorax ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Intercostal space ,business ,Cadaveric spasm - Abstract
Tension pneumothorax is a life-threatening condition that must be intervened upon immediately to prevent death. Due to high failure rates of successfully decompressing tension pneumothorax, recent studies have been performed to seek alternate sites and needle size to improve success rates of needle decompression. CT, ultrasound, and cadaveric studies were performed looking at the fourth and fifth intercostal spaces at the anterior axillary line (AAL) with respect to chest wall thickness (CWT). The distance to vital structures was measured as a surrogate for unintentional injury. These studies revealed a decrease in CWT of 5–13 mm at the fourth and fifth ICS AAL. They also indicate that Increasing the needle length from 5 to 8 cm would improve success rates at all sites from roughly 70 to 96 % with no significant increase in injury to deep vital structures (DVS) assuming appropriate technique. The results of these studies indicate that using alternate sites and needle length would improve successful outcomes in the management of tension pneumothorax.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive Devices
- Author
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James R. Johnston and David W. Callaway
- Subjects
History ,Explosive material - Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
35. Contributors
- Author
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Yasser A. Alaska, Abdulaziz D. Aldawas, Saleh Ali Alesa, George A. Alexander, Hazem H. Alhazmi, Nawfal Aljerian, Majed AlJohani, Khaldoon H. AlKhaldi, Bryant Allen, Bader S. Alotaibi, Mohammad Alotaibi, Evan Avraham Alpert, Rakan S. Al-Rasheed, Mai Alshammari, Asaad Alsufyani, Siraj Amanullah, Ali Ardalan, Andrew W. Artenstein, Miriam Aschkenasy, Matthew R. Babineau, Kavita Babu, Olivia E. Bailey, Gregory T. Banner, Fermin Barrueto, Susan A. Bartels, Bruce M. Becker, Paul D. Biddinger, Eike Blohm, Susan R. Blumenthal, Stephen W. Borron, Michelangelo Bortolin, Michael Bouton, Peter Brewster, Churton Budd, James M. Burke, Frederick M. Burkle, Lynne Barkley Burnett, Nicholas V. Cagliuso, John D. Cahill, David W. Callaway, Duane C. Caneva, David M. Canther, Srihari Cattamanchi, Edward W. Cetaruk, James C. Chang, Zeno L. Charles-Marcel, Anna I. Cheh, David T. Chiu, Teriggi J. Ciccone, Gregory R. Ciottone, Jonathan Peter Ciottone, Robert A. Ciottone, Diana Clapp, Raphael G. Cohen, Kathe M. Conlon, Joanne Cono, Hilarie Cranmer, Cord W. Cunningham, Steven O. Cunnion, Alison Sisitsky Curcio, Robert G. Darling, Neil B. Davids, Timothy E. Davis, Scott Deitchman, John B. Delaney, Francesco Della Corte, Gerard DeMers, William E. Dickerson, Sharon Dilling, Ahmadreza Djalali, Joseph Donahue, K. Sophia Dyer, Jason Dylik, Benjamin Easter, Laura Ebbeling, Nir Eyal, Andrew J. Eyre, Saleh Fares, Katherine Farmer, Denis J. FitzGerald, Elizabeth Foley, Kerry Fosher, David Freeman, Robert L. Freitas, Franklin D. Friedman, Frederick Fung, Fiona E. Gallahue, Lucille Gans, Stephanie Chow Garbern, Mark E. Gebhart, James Geiling, Brian C. Geyer, Mary Jo Giordano, William A. Gluckman, J. Scott Goudie, Robert M. Gougelet, Benjamin Graboyes, Michael I. Greenberg, P. Gregg Greenough, Ashley L. Greiner, Mark Greve, Stephen Grosse, Shamai A. Grossman, Tee L. Guidotti, Jason B. Hack, Matthew M. Hall, John W. Hardin, John L. Hick, Nishanth S. Hiremath, Steven Horng, Geoffrey D. Horning, Kurt R. Horst, Ali A. Hosin, Amer Hosin, Hans R. House, Pier Luigi Ingrassia, Patrick M. Jackson, Irving 'Jake' Jacoby, Rajnish Jaiswal, Adam J. Janicki, Gregory Jay, Miriam John, Shawn E. Johnson, James R. Johnston, Jerrilyn Jones, Michael D. Jones, Josh W. Joseph, Patrice Joseph, Alexis Kearney, Donald Keen, Mark E. Keim, Elizabeth Kenez, Katharyn E. Kennedy, Anas A. Khan, Chetan U. Kharod, Sylvia H. Kim, Kevin King, Mark A. Kirk, Leo Kobayashi, Lara K. Kulchycki, Rick G. Kulkarni, Joseph Lauro, Benjamin J. Lawner, David V. Le, Debra Lee, Terrance T. Lee, Jay Lemery, Jeanette A. Linder, Lawrence S. Linder, Michael A. Loesch, Heather Long, Kate Longley-Wood, Michael D. Mack, John M. Mackay, Laura Macnow, James M. Madsen, Brian J. Maguire, Patrick J. Maher, Selwyn E. Mahon, John D. Malone, Marco Mangini, Paul M. Maniscalco, David Marcozzi, Pietro D. Marghella, Jeff Matthews, Peter McCahill, Sean D. McKay, C. Crawford Mecham, Mandana Mehta, Patricia L. Meinhardt, Laura Diane Melville, Angela M. Mills, Andrew M. Milsten, Clifford S. Mitchell, Dale M. Molé, Michael Sean Molloy, John Moloney, Ilaria Morelli, Jerry L. Mothershead, John Mulhern, Nicole F. Mullendore, Larry A. Nathanson, Amelia Marie Nelson, Erica L. Nelson, Lewis S. Nelson, Carey Nichols, Mariann Nocera, Erin E. Noste, Catherine Y. Ordun, Peter D. Panagos, Robert Partridge, Jeffrey S. Paul, Catherine Pettit, James Pfaff, James P. Phillips, Jason Pickett, William Porcaro, Thérèse M. Postel, Charles N. Pozner, P.R. Vidyalakshmi, Lawrence Proano, Peter B. Pruitt, Jeffrey S. Rabrich, Jeffrey D. Race, Luca Ragazzoni, Najma Rahman-Kahn, Kristin Allyce Reed, Wende R. Reenstra, Paul P. Rega, Michael J. Reilly, Andrew T. Reisner, Marc C. Restuccia, James J. Rifino, James Michael Riley, Paul M. Robben, Kevin M. Ryan, Heather Rybasack-Smith, Leon D. Sanchez, Ritu R. Sarin, Debra D. Schnelle, Valarie Schwind, Malcolm Seheult, Kinjal N. Sethuraman, Geoffrey L. Shapiro, Marc J. Shapiro, Sam Shen, Suzanne M. Shepherd, William H. Shoff, Craig Sisson, Alexander P. Skog, Jonathan E. Slutzman, Devin M. Smith, E. Reed Smith, Jack E. Smith, Peter B. Smulowitz, Angela M. Snyder, Joshua J. Solano, John Sorenson, Kimberly A. Stanford, Charles Stewart, M. Kathleen Stewart, Carol Sulis, Robert J. Tashjian, Elizabeth S. Temin, Andrea G. Tenner, Craig D. Thorne, Jason A. Tracy, Milana Trounce, Jonathan Harris Valente, Alice Venier, Faith Vilas, Gary M. Vilke, Janna H. Villano, Barbara Vogt, Amalia Voskanyan, Scott G. Weiner, Brielle Weinstein, Eric S. Weinstein, Scott D. Weir, Roy Karl Werner, Sage W. Wiener, Kenneth A. Williams, Robyn Wing, Wendy Hin-Wing Wong, Richard E. Wolfe, Stephen P. Wood, Robert H. Woolard, Prasit Wuthisuthimethawee, Kevin Yeskey, Sami A. Yousif, Nadine A. Youssef, and Brian J. Yun
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Military Lessons Learned for Disaster Response
- Author
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Paul M. Robben and David W. Callaway
- Subjects
business.industry ,Medicine ,Public relations ,business ,Disaster response - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Geriatric Trauma
- Author
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David W, Callaway and Richard, Wolfe
- Subjects
Diagnostic Imaging ,Rib Fractures ,Resuscitation ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Fractures, Bone ,Geriatrics ,Brain Injuries ,Emergency Medicine ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Emergencies ,Triage ,Pelvic Bones ,Aged - Abstract
Elderly trauma patients present unique challenges and face more significant obstacles to recovery than younger patients. Despite overall higher mortality, longer length of stay, increased resource use, and higher rates of discharge to rehabilitation, most elderly trauma patients return to independent or preinjury functional status. Critical to improving these outcomes is an understanding that although similar trauma principles apply to the elderly, these patients require more aggressive evaluation and resuscitation. This article reviews the recent developments in the literature regarding care of the elderly trauma patient.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Ranger First Responder Program and Tactical Emergency Casualty Care Implementation: A Whole-Community Approach to Reducing Mortality From Active Violent Incidents
- Author
-
Andrew D Fisher, David W Callaway, Josh N Robertson, Shane A Hardwick, Joshua P Bobko, and Russ S Kotwal
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Emergency Responders ,General Medicine ,Violence ,United States ,Government Agencies ,Traumatology ,Models, Organizational ,Physicians ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Wounds and Injuries ,Community Health Services ,Military Medicine ,Progressive Patient Care - Abstract
Active violent incidents are dynamic and challenging situations that can produce a significant amount of preventable deaths. Lessons learned from the military?s experience in Afghanistan and Iraq through the Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care and the 75th Ranger Regiment?s Ranger First Responder Program have helped create the Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC) to address the uniqueness of similar wounding patterns and to end preventable deaths. We propose a whole-community approach to active violent incidents, using the C-TECC Trauma Chain of Survival and a tiered approach for training and responsibilities: the first care provider, nonmedical professional first responders, medical first responders, and physicians and trauma surgeons. The different tiers are critical early links in the Chain of Survival and this approach will have a significant impact on active violent incidents.
- Published
- 2015
39. TacMed Updates: Spring Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC) Update
- Author
-
Reed Smith, Joshua P Bobko, Geoffrey Shapiro, Brendan Hartford, and David W Callaway
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2015
40. Tactical emergency casualty care. The need forevolution of civilian high threat medical guidelines
- Author
-
Reed, Smith and David W, Callaway
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Traumatology ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Disaster Planning ,Guidelines as Topic ,Military Medicine ,Emergency Treatment - Published
- 2015
41. Preparing for the unthinkable. Tactical emergency casualty care pediatric guidelines
- Author
-
Joshua P, Bobko, David W, Callaway, and E Reed, Smith
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Disaster Planning ,Emergency Treatment ,Pediatrics - Published
- 2015
42. TacMed Updates: Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (TECC) Update: Winter 2014
- Author
-
David W Callaway, Reed Smith, and Geoffrey Shapiro
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2014
43. Integration of energy analytics and smart energy microgrid into mobile medicine operations for the 2012 Democratic National Convention
- Author
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A.J. Rossman, Peter McCahill, David W Callaway, and Erin Noste
- Subjects
Engineering ,business.industry ,Photovoltaic system ,Politics ,Disaster Planning ,Emergency Nursing ,Energy conservation measure ,Mobile Applications ,Energy storage ,United States ,Reliability engineering ,Energy management system ,Energy conservation ,Anniversaries and Special Events ,Crowding ,Electric Power Supplies ,Analytics ,Emergency Medicine ,Alternative energy ,Humans ,Microgrid ,business ,Simulation ,Mobile Health Units - Abstract
IntroductionDisasters create major strain on energy infrastructure in affected communities. Advances in microgrid technology offer the potential to improve “off-grid” mobile disaster medical response capabilities beyond traditional diesel generation. The Carolinas Medical Center's mobile emergency medical unit (MED-1) Green Project (M1G) is a multi-phase project designed to demonstrate the benefits of integrating distributive generation (DG), high-efficiency batteries, and “smart” energy utilization in support of major out-of-hospital medical response operations.MethodsCarolinas MED-1 is a mobile medical facility composed of a fleet of vehicles and trailers that provides comprehensive medical care capacities to support disaster response and special-event operations. The M1G project partnered with local energy companies to deploy energy analytics and an energy microgrid in support of mobile clinical operations for the 2012 Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Charlotte, North Carolina (USA). Energy use data recorded throughout the DNC were analyzed to create energy utilization models that integrate advanced battery technology, solar photovoltaic (PV), and energy conservation measures (ECM) to improve future disaster response operations.ResultsThe generators that supply power for MED-1 have a minimum loading ratio (MLR) of 30 kVA. This means that loads below 30 kW lead to diesel fuel consumption at the same rate as a 30 kW load. Data gathered from the two DNC training and support deployments showed the maximum load of MED-1 to be around 20 kW. This discrepancy in MLR versus actual load leads to significant energy waste. The lack of an energy storage system reduces generator efficiency and limits integration of alternative energy generation strategies. A storage system would also allow for alternative generation sources, such as PV, to be incorporated. Modeling with a 450 kWh battery bank and 13.5 kW PV array showed a 2-fold increase in potential deployment times using the same amount of fuel versus the current conventional system.ConclusionsThe M1G Project demonstrated that the incorporation of a microgrid energy management system and a modern battery system maximize the MED-1 generators’ output. Using a 450 kWh battery bank and 13.5 kW PV array, deployment operations time could be more than doubled before refueling. This marks a dramatic increase in patient care capabilities and has significant public health implications. The results highlight the value of smart-microgrid technology in developing energy independent mobile medical capabilities and expanding cost-effective, high-quality medical response.McCahillPW, NosteEE, RossmanAJ, CallawayDW. Integration of energy analytics and smart energy microgrid into mobile medicine operations for the 2012 Democratic National Convention. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2014;29(6):1-8.
- Published
- 2014
44. Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC) Update: Fall 2014
- Author
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David W, Callaway, Reed, Smith, Geoffrey, Shapiro, Joshua P, Bobko, and Sean D, McKay
- Abstract
The Johns Hopkins Center for Law Enforcement Medicine and Division of Special Operations in Baltimore generously hosted the June 2014 Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care meeting (C-TECC). The C-TECC meeting focused on several critical issues including guideline updates, review of C-TECC member involvement in recent federal efforts regarding active violent incidents, examination of national best practices, and new partnership agreements.
- Published
- 2014
45. TacMed Updates: Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (C-TECC) Update: Summer 2014
- Author
-
David W, Callaway, Reed, Smith, Geoffrey, Shapiro, and Sean D, McKay
- Published
- 2014
46. Development of a National Consensus for Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS) Training Programs--Operators and Medical Providers
- Author
-
Richard B, Schwartz, Brooke, Lerner, Craig, Llewellyn, Andre, Pennardt, Ian, Wedmore, David W, Callaway, John M, Wightman, Raymond, Casillas, Alexander L, Eastman, Kevin B, Gerold, Stephen, Giebner, Robert, Davidson, Richard, Kamin, Gina, Piazza, Glenn A, Bollard, Philip A, Carmona, Ben, Sonstrom, William, Seifarth, Barbara, Nicely, and John, Croushorn
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Emergency Medical Technicians ,Law Enforcement ,Delphi Technique ,Humans ,Emergencies ,Emergency Treatment ,Police ,Education - Abstract
Tactical teams are at high risk of sustaining injuries. Caring for these casualties in the field involves unique requirements beyond what is provided by traditional civilian emergency medical services (EMS) systems. Despite this need, the training objectives and competencies are not uniformly agreed to or taught.An expert panel was convened that included members from the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, and Health and Human Services, as well as federal, state, and local law-enforcement officers who were recruited through requests to stakeholder agencies and open invitations to individuals involved in Tactical Emergency Medical Services (TEMS) or its oversight. Two face-to-face meetings took place. Using a modified Delphi technique, previously published TEMS competencies were reviewed and updated.The original 17 competency domains were modified and the most significant changes were the addition of Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (TECC), Tactical Familiarization, Legal Aspects of TEMS, and Mass Casualty Triage to the competency domains. Additionally, enabling and terminal learning objectives were developed for each competency domain.This project has developed a minimum set of medical competencies and learning objectives for both tactical medical providers and operators. This work should serve as a platform for ensuring minimum knowledge among providers, which will serve enhance team interoperability and improve the health and safety of tactical teams and the public.
- Published
- 2014
47. Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care (CoTECC) Update: Summer 2014
- Author
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David W Callaway, Reed Smith, Geoffrey Shapiro, and Sean D McKay
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2014
48. Evaluation of 8.0-cm needle at the fourth anterior axillary line for needle chest decompression of tension pneumothorax
- Author
-
David J. Kiefer, Ronald F. Sing, David W Callaway, Amelia Rogers, Samuel J. Chang, William E. Anderson, and Samuel W. Ross
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Decompression ,Radiography ,Axillary lines ,Thoracostomy ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Young Adult ,Injury Severity Score ,X ray computed ,medicine ,Second intercostal space ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Pneumothorax ,Equipment Design ,Middle Aged ,Decompression, Surgical ,Tension pneumothorax ,respiratory tract diseases ,Surgery ,MIdclavicular line ,Treatment Outcome ,Needles ,Axilla ,Female ,Radiology ,business ,Fourth intercostal space ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Five-centimeter needles at the second intercostal space midclavicular line (2MCL) have high failure rates for decompression of tension pneumothorax. This study evaluates 8-cm needles directed at the fourth intercostal space anterior axillary line (4AAL).Retrospective radiographic analysis of 100 consecutive trauma patients 18 years or older from January to September 2011. Measurements of chest wall thickness (CWT) and depth to vital structure (DVS) were obtained at 2MCL and 4AAL. 4AAL measurements were taken based on two angles: closest vital structure and perpendicular to the chest wall. Primary outcome measures were radiographic decompression (RD) (defined as CWT80 mm) and radiographic noninjury (RNI) (DVS80 mm) of 8-cm needles at 4AAL. Secondary outcome measures are effect of angle of entry on RNI at 4AAL, RD and RNI of 8-cm needles at 2MCL, and comparison of 5-cm needles with 8-cm needles at both locations.Eighty-four percent of the patients were male, with mean Injury Severity Score (ISS) of 17.7 (range, 1.0-66.0) and body mass index of 26.8 (16.5-48.4). Mean CWT at 4AAL ranged from 37.6 mm to 39.9 mm, significantly thinner than mean CWT at 2MCL (43.3-46.7 mm). Eight-centimeter needle RD was more than 96% at both 4AAL and 2MCL. Five-centimeter RD ranged from 66% to 81% at all sites. Mean DVS at 4AAL ranged from 91.8 mm to 128.0 mm. RNI at all sites was more than 91% except at left 4AAL, when taken to the closest vital structure (mean DVS, 91.8 mm), with 68% RNI. Perpendicular entry increased DVS to 109.4 mm and subsequent RNI to 91%. Five-centimeter RNI at all sites was more than 99%.CWT at 4AAL is significantly thinner than 2MCL. Based on radiographic measurements, 8-cm catheters have a higher chance of pleural decompression when compared with 5-cm catheters. Steeper angle of entry at 4AAL improves 8-cm noninjury rates to more than 91%.Therapeutic/care management study, level IV.
- Published
- 2014
49. Incidence of fatal airway obstruction in police officers feloniously killed in the line of duty: a 10-year retrospective analysis
- Author
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David W Callaway, Laura A. Fisher, and Matthew D. Sztajnkrycer
- Subjects
Databases, Factual ,Poison control ,Emergency Nursing ,Coroner ,Neck Injuries ,Cause of Death ,Injury prevention ,Medicine ,Humans ,Facial Injuries ,Cause of death ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Incidence ,medicine.medical_device ,Airway obstruction ,medicine.disease ,Nasopharyngeal airway ,Occupational Injuries ,Police ,United States ,Airway Obstruction ,Emergency Medicine ,Wounds, Gunshot ,Medical emergency ,Autopsy ,business ,Advanced airway management ,Penetrating trauma - Abstract
BackgroundAccording to US military data, airway obstruction is the third leading cause of possibly preventable death in combat. In the absence of law enforcement-specific medical training, military experience has been translated to the law enforcement sector. The purpose of this study was to determine whether airway obstruction represents a significant cause of possibly preventable death in police officers, and whether current military combat lifesaver training programs might have prevented these fatalities.MethodsDe-identified, open-source US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Uniform Crime Report Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) data for the years 1998-2007 were reviewed. Cases were included if officers were on duty at the time of fatal injury and died within one hour from time of wounding from penetrating face or neck trauma. After case identification, letters requesting autopsy reports were sent to the departments of victim officers. Reports were abstracted into a Microsoft Excel database.ResultsDuring the study period, 42 of 533 victim officers met inclusion criteria. Departmental response rate was 85.7%. Autopsy reports were provided for 29 officers; 23 (54.8%) cases remained in the final analysis. All officers died from gunshot wounds. No coroner specifically identified airway obstruction as either a direct cause of death or contributing factor. Based upon autopsy findings, three of 341 officers possibly succumbed to airway trauma (0.9%; 95% CI, 0.0%-1.9%). Endotracheal intubation was the most common advanced airway management technique utilized during attempted resuscitation.ConclusionThe limited LEOKA data suggests that acute airway obstruction secondary to penetrating trauma appears to be a rare cause of possibly preventable death in police officers. Based upon the nature of airway trauma, nasopharyngeal airways would not be expected to be an effective lifesaving intervention. This study highlights the requirement for a comprehensive mortality and “near miss” database for law enforcement officers.FisherL, CallawayD, SztajnkrycerM. Incidence of fatal airway obstruction in police officers feloniously killed in the line of duty: a 10-year retrospective analysis. Prehosp Disaster Med.2013;28(5):1-5.
- Published
- 2013
50. Redefining Technical Rescue and Casualty Care for SOF: Part 1
- Author
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Sean D McKay, J Johnston, and David W Callaway
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Military Personnel ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,General Medicine ,Military Medicine - Abstract
Trauma care in the tactical environment is complex; it requires a unique blend of situational awareness, foresight, medical skill, multitasking, and physical strength. Rescue is a critical, but often over-looked, component of nearly all tactical trauma casualty management. Successful full spectrum casualty management requires proficiency in four areas: casualty access, assessment, stabilization, and extraction. When complex rescue situations arise (casualty removal from roof tops, mountain terrain, collapsed structures, wells, or a karez), casualty care often becomes further complicated. Special Operations units have historically looked to civilian technical rescue techniques and equipment to fill this ?rescue gap.? Similar to the evolution of pre-hospital military medicine from civilian guidelines (e.g. Advanced Trauma Life Support) (ATLS)) to an evidence-based, tactical-specific guideline (Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC)), an evolution is required within the rescue paradigm. This shift from civilian-based technical rescue guidelines towards an Operational Rescue? capability allows tactical variables such as minimal equipment, low light/night vision goggles (NVG) considerations, enemy threats, and variable evacuation times to permeate through the individual rescue skill set. Just as with TCCC, in which the principles of casualty care remain consistent, the practices must be adapted to end-users environment, so it is with rescue.
- Published
- 2012
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