Consensus statements regarding the multidisciplinary care of limb amputation patients in disasters or humanitarian emergencies: Report of the 2011 humanitarian action summit surgical working group on amputations following disasters or conflict.

L.M. Knowlton, J.E. Gosney Jr., S. Chackungal, E. Altschuler, L. Black, F.M. Burkle, K. Casey, D. Crandell, D. Demey, L. Di Giacomo, L. Dohlman, J. Goldstein, R. Gosselin, K. Ikeda, A. Le Roy, A. Linden, C.M. Mullaly, J. Nickerson, C. O'Connell, A.D. RedmondA. Richards, R. Rufsvold, A.L.R. Santos, T. Skelton, K. McQueen

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Limb amputations are frequently performed as a result of trauma inflicted during conflict or disasters. As demonstrated during the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, coordinating care of these patients in austere settings is complex. During the 2011 Humanitarian Action Summit, consensus statements were developed for international organizations providing care to limb amputation patients during disasters or humanitarian emergencies. Expanded planning is needed for a multidisciplinary surgical care team, inclusive of surgeons, anesthesiologists, rehabilitation specialists and mental health professionals. Surgical providers should approach amputation using an operative technique that optimizes limb length and prosthetic fitting. Appropriate anesthesia care involves both peri-operative and long-term pain control. Rehabilitation specialists must be involved early in treatment, ideally before amputation, and should educate the surgical team in prosthetic considerations. Mental health specialists must be included to help the patient with community reintegration. A key step in developing local health systems the establishment of surgical outcomes monitoring. Such monitoring can optimizepatient follow-up and foster professional accountability for the treatment of amputation patients in disaster settings and humanitarian emergencies.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)438-448
    Number of pages11
    JournalPrehospital and Disaster Medicine
    Volume26
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2011

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