1.Disaster medicine: current status and future directions of emergency medical team for overseas disaster crisis.
Minhong CHOA ; Jiyoung NOH ; Hyun Soo CHUNG
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2017;60(2):149-155
Through the Declaration of Montevideo in 2011, the World Medical Association suggested that doctors worldwide should be trained in basic disaster response regardless of their specialty. The Haiti earthquake in 2010, which had the highest number of foreign medical team dispatched from all over the world, proved that untrained and disorganized team only brought confusion. This event led the World Health Organization to develop the ‘Classification and Minimum Standards for Foreign Medical Teams in Sudden Onset Disasters ’ in 2013. This guideline will become the standard for organizing an international emergency medical team. We should be able to provide high standard of care through field hospital set up and continuous training of disaster medicine specialists.
Disaster Medicine*
;
Disasters*
;
Earthquakes
;
Emergencies*
;
Haiti
;
Mobile Health Units
;
Specialization
;
Standard of Care
;
World Health Organization
2.Experience of a Medical Disaster Assistance Team during the Subacute Period after the Haiti Earthquake.
Kwang Jin AHN ; Yun Kwon KIM ; Du Yong PARK ; Hyun KIM ; Kyung Cheul CHA ; Kang Hyun LEE ; Sung Oh HWANG ; Dae Jung HYUN
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2011;22(3):200-205
PURPOSE: A medical disaster assistance team from our hospital was sent to the Haiti earthquake for 7 days of medical support. METHODS: We analyzed the characteristics of patients who visited our field clinic at the scene during the subacute period after the disaster. RESULTS: We treated 120 patients over 4 days, including two patients during the preparatory period. Most patients had visited a clinic in the second half of the period. Internal medicine and pediatrics were associated with the chief complaints of most patients. Acute tonsillitis had the largest number of patients(24.6%), followed by skin infections (9.2%), contusions and sprains(8.4%), and gastric ulcers (8.4%). Most of the medications were for conservative management(68.3%). CONCLUSION: During the subacute period after the earthquake, most patients had secondary injuries, such as wound complications and complications from air and water pollution, rather than direct injuries from the earthquake. We recommend that more medical preparation than surgical preparation is required during subacute periods after an earthquake.
Contusions
;
Disasters
;
Earthquakes
;
Haiti
;
Humans
;
Internal Medicine
;
Medical Assistance
;
Palatine Tonsil
;
Pediatrics
;
Skin
;
Stomach Ulcer
;
Tonsillitis
;
Water Pollution
3.Spontaneous Healing of Multiple Penetration Wounds Induced by Cactus Spines
Sang Woo PARK ; Eui Sung JUNG ; Kyung Hwa NAM ; Jin PARK ; Seok Kweon YUN
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2019;57(8):484-487
Cactus spines can easily puncture the skin with only minor pressure. Removal of the offending cactus spine is the treatment of choice; however, it is very difficult, even with tweezers. A 17-year-old Korean girl presented for evaluation of multiple purple-colored macules and papules on the left cheek and left thumb. Two months earlier, she had pricked her finger and face on cactus spines while volunteering in Haiti. An ultrasound identified wedge-shaped echogenic materials suspected as cactus spines. We recommended surgical removal of the spines, but she vehemently refused. We then advised her to take amoxicillin/clavulanic acid and undergo regular follow-up. During the follow-up period, the spines dislodged spontaneously for easy removal and the patient removed them with tweezers. The lesions actually improved over the next several months. Here, we report this rare and interesting case for educational purposes because such a case has never been previously reported in Korea.
Adolescent
;
Cactaceae
;
Cheek
;
Female
;
Fingers
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Haiti
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Punctures
;
Skin
;
Spine
;
Thumb
;
Ultrasonography
;
Wounds and Injuries