Lessons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Response to COVID-19 in Kazakhstan
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan
2.2. Ethical Approval Details
2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Challenges during the COVID-19 Outbreak
4.1.1. Incorrect Forecast
4.1.2. Inability to Reach an Ambulance
4.1.3. Ambulance Shortage and Shortage of Personal Protective Equipment, Ventilators, Diagnostic Tools (PCR)
4.1.4. Inadequate Prevention in Society
4.1.5. Shortage of Doctors and Medical Personnel
4.1.6. Mental State of Medical Personnel
5. Conclusions
- Finances: The ability to raise the money required in the event of a new epidemic is crucial to maintain services.
- During a pandemic, all parts of the healthcare system must work harmoniously. The weak performance of one link leads to the overload of another. For ambulances to operate effectively, it is necessary to improve the work of local outpatient services.
- Coordinate the proper distribution of resources. Investing in trained doctors and paramedics, developing proprietary medications, vaccines, and medical supplies. Training and developing the practical skills of medical personnel when working with especially dangerous infections (personal protective equipment, sorting patients by severity, algorithms for diagnosing and providing emergency care, transportation). Expanding our own manufacturing of masks and personal protective equipment. Improving the equipment of ambulances with ventilators, oxygen concentrates, and medicines.
- The lack of preparedness of the ambulance service in Kazakhstan is associated with an incorrect forecast. It is necessary to use prognostic scales to correctly predict morbidity.
- The experience of the pandemic has shown the high cost-effectiveness and safety of distant consultations. It is necessary to further develop dispatch system, telemedicine, and distant consultations.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Number of Emergency Calls | 2019 † | 2020 † | 2021 † | 2022 † | 2023 † | p |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Emergency calls (mean for one region per 1 year) | 529,307 (±381,301) | 450,940 (±334,591) | 494,578 (±350,816) | 380,680.5 (±366,475) | 365,157 (±366,521) | 0.726 |
Emergency calls per 1000 inhabitants * | 466.58 (±137.81) | 426.10 (±126.77) | 470.55 (±127.36) | 436.69 (±105.83) | 410.02 (±104.85) | 0.021 |
Cancelled calls (mean for one station per 1 year) | 2724 (±8231) | 1987 (±8700) | 1112.5 (±5765) | 357.5 (±5622) | 95.5 (±2954) | 0.647 |
Number of consultations (mean for one station per 1 year) | 7635 (±15,516) | 8516 (±15,361) | 13,616 (±13,391) | 14,069 (±26,221) | 16649 (±40,014) | 0.657 |
Ineffective calls (mean for one regio per 1 year) | 8905 (±8644) | 9985 (±6801) | 12,525 (±8460) | 9789 (±9193) | 10,853.5 (±11,327) | 0.829 |
Fulfilled calls (mean for one station per 1 year) | 489,403 (±304,808) | 416,183 (±281,659) | 455,750 (±324,041) | 335,520 (±318,337) | 337,181.5 (±324,698) | 0.79 |
Clinical Diagnosis | Monthly Statistics | p | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 † | 2020 † | 2021 † | 2022 † | 2023 † | ||
Infectious Diseases | 26,365 (±39,327) | 18,678 (±32,957) | 15,903 (±24,630) | 15,373 (±19,918) | 12,520 (±15,408) | 0.153 |
Cardio-vascular diseases | 72,543 (±66,100) | 72,711 (±68,094) | 70,879.38 (±52,833) | 65,472.5 (±52,468) | 69,820.5 (±46,398) | 0.938 |
Trauma and poisoning | 27,474 (±34,891) | 27,315 (±34,021) | 29,702 (±33,141) | 27,093 (±30,811) | 27,716.5 (±30,423) | 0.97 |
Traffic accidents | 1518 (±2152) | 1432 (±1465) | 1659 (±1930) | 1527.5 (±1788) | 1633.5 (±1252) | 0.676 |
Neurological diseases * | 37,277.24 [26,906.68; 47,647.79] | 30,826.5 [22,784.17; 38,868.83] | 34,613.88 [25,581.67; 43,646.08] | 36,726.44 [26,627.31; 46,825.58] | 37,083.9 [26,256.08; 47,911.72] | 0.899 |
Respiratory diseases * | 99,125 [71,767.09; 126,482.91] | 95,027.58 [70,391.22; 119,663.93] | 122,482.28 [90,711.49; 154,253.07] | 123,817.72 [87,691.84; 159,943.6] | 104,206.15 [77,571.01; 130,841.29] | 0.677 |
Gastrointestinal diseases | 23,872 (±18,754) | 19,900 (±15,152) | 23,196 (±23,105) | 23,554 (±26,680) | 27,854.5 (±24,857) | 0.719 |
Obstetrics and gynecology | 20,924 (±35,571) | 21,935 (±37,090) | 23,890 (±35,826) | 20,382.5 (±22,379) | 17,848.5 (±24,134) | 0.911 |
Acute surgical diseases * | 17,182.59 [13,294.11; 21,071.06] | 12,234.5 [9441.24; 15,027.76] | 13,252.65 [9687.71; 16,817.58] | 13,460.5 [9627.96; 17,293.04] | 11,592.9 [8492.48; 14,693.32] | 0.183 |
Urinary tract diseases | 11,399 (±14,691) | 8083 (±12,309) | 7053 (±7277) | 6837.5 (±7999) | 6290.5 (±7518) | 0.046 |
Others | 80,463 (±67,543) | 67,060 (±65,008) | 76,365 (±50,626) | 75,979.5 (±52,343) | 65,662.5 (±55,830) | 0.622 |
Category of urgency | ||||||
I urgency category | 15,885 (±34,957) | 15,857 (±23,809) | 18,754 (±20,831) | 14,633.5 (±20,790) | 13,604.5 (±20,385) | 0.901 |
II urgency category | 119,466 (±134,124) | 98,817 (±118,520) | 116,745 (±112,724) | 109,072.5 (±94,825) | 105,274.5 (±81,443) | 0.943 |
III urgency category | 129,696 (±87,978) | 111,778 (±75,081) | 112,674 (±108,103) | 110,524 (±116,393) | 96,230 (±105,434) | 0.702 |
IV urgency category, served by ambulance (abs number) | 36,153 (±86,113) | 17,583 (±44,670) | 20,375 (±52,019) | 172,420.5 (±147,203) | 161,536 (±121,573) | 0.001 |
IV urgency category, served by emergency medical services teams at primary health care facilities (abs. number) | 91,207 (±103,525) | 108,512 (±121,601) | 117,501 (±138,812) | 120,174.5 (±137,539) | 94,864 (±123,835) | 0.629 |
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Messova, A.; Pivina, L.; Ygiyeva, D.; Batenova, G.; Dyussupov, A.; Jamedinova, U.; Syzdykbayev, M.; Adilgozhina, S.; Bayanbaev, A. Lessons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12161568
Messova A, Pivina L, Ygiyeva D, Batenova G, Dyussupov A, Jamedinova U, Syzdykbayev M, Adilgozhina S, Bayanbaev A. Lessons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan. Healthcare. 2024; 12(16):1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12161568
Chicago/Turabian StyleMessova, Assylzhan, Lyudmila Pivina, Diana Ygiyeva, Gulnara Batenova, Almas Dyussupov, Ulzhan Jamedinova, Marat Syzdykbayev, Saltanat Adilgozhina, and Arman Bayanbaev. 2024. "Lessons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan" Healthcare 12, no. 16: 1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12161568
APA StyleMessova, A., Pivina, L., Ygiyeva, D., Batenova, G., Dyussupov, A., Jamedinova, U., Syzdykbayev, M., Adilgozhina, S., & Bayanbaev, A. (2024). Lessons of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Ambulance Service in Kazakhstan. Healthcare, 12(16), 1568. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12161568