Community Response to Burn Injuries: Examples from Dhading District of Nepal
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Situation of Burn Injuries and Deaths in Nepal
3.2. Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
3.2.1. Training for RFR
Day 1, 8 h |
Lesson 1: Introduction, Objectives, Emergency Communication Center, Pre-test, First Aid, RFR, EMS, Patients’ communication, and Roles and Responsibilities of RFR. |
Lesson 2: Patient Assessment System, Hands-on Approach, and Practical Skills. |
Lesson 3: Life Threats, triage, hemorrhage control, shock, Airway issues, Rescue Breathing, CPR, and day conclusion, Life Threats, Open Pneumothorax, Tension Pneumothorax, and Seizures. |
Day 2, 8 h |
Lesson 4: Musculoskeletal Injury, Head Injury, Spinal Injury, Muscle & Ligament Injury, Bone, Burns, Blisters, Crush Injury, Eye Injuries, and Dental Emergencies. |
Lesson 5: Medical Illness, Cardiac Illness, Stroke, Respiratory Illness, Abdominal Problems, Constipation, Diarrhea, Nausea & Vomiting, Allergic, Reaction, Diabetes, Hypoglycemia & Hypoglycemia, Scenario, and Day’s Conclusion. |
Day 3, 8 h |
Lesson 6: Environmental Topics, Heat Illness, Hypothermia, Frostbite, High Altitude Sickness, Poisoning, Bites (Snake, animal bites), Stings, Lightening, Drowning. |
Lesson 7: Childbirth. |
Lesson 8: Evacuation Techniques |
Practical Skill, Post-test, Result, and Certification, Training Evaluation, and Graduation Ceremony |
Local resources used: RFR were taught how to use local resources, such as clothes, clean water, plastic bags, sticks, and tarpaulin. |
3.2.2. Selection Criteria of RFR
3.2.3. Data Capturing System
3.2.4. Service Delivery System
3.2.5. Rural First Responder Evacuation of Burn Victim
3.3. Rural First Responders Model Response for Burn Injuries
3.4. Burn Case Analysis for Project District Dhading
3.5. Case Studies
On 8 April 2017, at around 9:00 a.m., a 70-year-old woman was cooking food for lunch. Suddenly, the utensils with which she was cooking the vegetable curry became imbalanced and hot curry spilled over her body. The burn was severe, and her family members first poured drinking water and applied fresh Aloe Vera gel in the wound. |
While this incident occurred, a trained Rural First Responder, Maiya (name changed), was on her regular teaching job in a school. When she came to know about the incident from a villager, she immediately called to Emergency Communication Center in District Hospital, and RFR was suggested to evacuate her by ambulance; and, in two hours, she was transported to Teaching Hospital at Kathmandu (70 km far from the place incident) via ambulance, for which she was charged $60. |
After being admitted for three months and spending around $1000 (direct costs including medicines, as reported by the patient’s family members), Malati was discharged from the hospital. |
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Bist, B.S.; Sedain, B.; Shrestha, M.; Tripathi, P. Community Response to Burn Injuries: Examples from Dhading District of Nepal. Eur. Burn J. 2021, 2, 55-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj2030005
Bist BS, Sedain B, Shrestha M, Tripathi P. Community Response to Burn Injuries: Examples from Dhading District of Nepal. European Burn Journal. 2021; 2(3):55-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj2030005
Chicago/Turabian StyleBist, Bimal Singh, Bhagabati Sedain, Maheshwar Shrestha, and Prativa Tripathi. 2021. "Community Response to Burn Injuries: Examples from Dhading District of Nepal" European Burn Journal 2, no. 3: 55-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj2030005
APA StyleBist, B. S., Sedain, B., Shrestha, M., & Tripathi, P. (2021). Community Response to Burn Injuries: Examples from Dhading District of Nepal. European Burn Journal, 2(3), 55-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj2030005