Australasian general surgical training and emergency medical teams: a review

Emergency medical teams (EMTs) have provided surgical care in sudden‐onset disasters in low‐ and middle‐income countries. General surgeons have been heavily involved in many EMTs due to their traditional broad set of surgical skills and experience. With the increased subspecialization of general sur...

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Veröffentlicht in:ANZ journal of surgery 2019-07, Vol.89 (7-8), p.815-820
Hauptverfasser: Coventry, Charles A., Holland, Andrew J. A., Read, David J., Ivers, Rebecca Q.
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container_title ANZ journal of surgery
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creator Coventry, Charles A.
Holland, Andrew J. A.
Read, David J.
Ivers, Rebecca Q.
description Emergency medical teams (EMTs) have provided surgical care in sudden‐onset disasters in low‐ and middle‐income countries. General surgeons have been heavily involved in many EMTs due to their traditional broad set of surgical skills and experience. With the increased subspecialization of general surgical training in many high‐income countries, including Australia and New Zealand, finding general surgeons with adequately broad experience is becoming more challenging. Furthermore, it is now considered standard for EMTs deploying to a sudden‐onset disaster to have undergone credentialing, demonstrating sufficient training of their deployed members. The purpose of this review was to highlight the challenges and potential solutions facing those involved in training and recruiting general surgeons for EMTs in Australasia.
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source Wiley Journals
subjects Disasters
Emergency medical services
general surgery
Income
Medical personnel
Surgeons
surgical education
Training
trauma
title Australasian general surgical training and emergency medical teams: a review
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