Item type | Location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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1 Week Loan |
College of Medical Sciences Resource Centre
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RA645.5 S77 (Browse shelf) | Item withdrawn |
No cover image available No cover image available | |||||||
RA645.37.C3 C37 Caring for / caring about : | RA645.5 H87 The hypercholesterolemia handbook. | RA645.5 M65 Monitoring emergency obstetric care : | RA645.5 S77 Strengthening care for the injured : | RA651 A6 19883 An introduction to epidemiology / | RA651 B65 Basic epidemiology / |
Editors: Charles Mock, Catherine Juillard, Manjul Joshipura, Jacques Goosen.
Includes bibliographical references.
Executive summary -- Introduction -- 1. Prehospital care -- 2. Hospital-based care -- 3. Rehabilitation -- 4. System-wide improvements -- Summary and lessons learned
"Injury accounts for a significant proportion of the world's burden of disease. Each year 5.8 million people die from injury and millions more are disabled. The response to this global health problem needs to include a range of activities, from better surveillance to more in-depth research, and primary prevention. Also needed are efforts to strengthen care of the injured. The World Health Organization (WHO) has responded to this need with a variety of actions. It has supported countries in setting up trauma care programmes and in developing their capacity to care for the injured. It has also developed, in consultation with global experts, guidelines to assist with the organization and planning of trauma care, such as Prehospital trauma care systems, Guidelines for essential trauma care, and Guidelines for trauma quality improvement programmes. These publications have been used in many countries and have helped to stimulate 'on the ground' improvements and policy changes. Efforts to improve care of the injured globally received a major boost in 2007 when the World Health Assembly (WHA) adopted resolution WHA60.22 on trauma and emergency care services. This called upon governments and WHO to increase their efforts to improve care for victims of injury and other medical emergencies. It also called upon WHO to raise awareness about affordable ways in which trauma and emergency care services can be strengthened, especially through universally applicable means such as improvements in organization and planning. Similarly, resolution WHA58.23 on disability, including prevention, management, and rehabilitation, requested WHO to provide support to countries in developing rehabilitation services for people with disabilities. In response to these requests WHO collected this set of case studies, documenting success stories and lessons learned from several countries. Through this publication, WHO seeks to increase communication and the exchange of ideas among those working in the field of trauma care, whether in the prehospital setting, in acute care in hospitals, or in longer term rehabilitation; to increase communication among those involved in planning, administering, advocating for, or directly providing trauma care services; and to increase communication among those working in the field of trauma care in different countries worldwide." - p. iii
0001641 HSRC
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