Deployment of field hospitals to disaster regions: Insights from ten medical relief operations spanning three decades

Authors

  • Michael Naor, PhD
  • Samuel N. Heyman, MD
  • Tarif Bader, MD, MHA
  • Ofer Merin, MD, MHA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5055/ajdm.2017.0277

Keywords:

disaster relief, field hospital, military Medicine

Abstract

Objective: The Israeli Defense Force (IDF) Medical Corps developed a model of airborne field hospital. This model was structured to deal with disaster settings, requiring self-sufficiency, innovation and flexible operative mode in the setup of large margins of uncertainty regarding the disaster environment. The current study is aimed to critically analyze the experience, gathered in ten such missions worldwide.

Methods: Interviews with physicians who actively participated in the missions from 1988 until 2015 as chief medical officers combined with literature review of principal medical and auxiliary publications in order to assess and integrate information about the assembly of these missions.

Results: A body of knowledge was accumulated over the years by the IDF Medical Corps from deploying numerous relief missions to both natural (earthquake, typhoon, and tsunami), and man-made disasters, occurring in nine countries (Armenia, Rwanda, Kosovo, Turkey, India, Haiti, Japan, Philippines, and Nepal). This study shows an evolutionary pattern with improvements implemented from one mission to the other, with special adaptations (creativity and improvisation) to accommodate logistics barriers.

Conclusion: The principals and operative function for deploying medical relief system, proposed over 20 years ago, were challenged and validated in the subsequent missions of IDF outlined in the current study. These principals, with the advantage of the military infrastructure and the expertise of drafted civilian medical professionals enable the rapid assembly and allocation of highly competent medical facilities in disaster settings. This structure model is to large extent self-sufficient with a substantial operative flexibility that permits early deployment upon request while the disaster assessment and definition of needs are preliminary.

Author Biographies

Michael Naor, PhD

Georgetown University, McDonough School of Business, Washington DC, United States of America; the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, School of Business Administration, Israel, Jerusalem

Samuel N. Heyman, MD

Department of Medicine, Hadassah Hebrew University Hospital, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem

Tarif Bader, MD, MHA

Israel Defense Forces Field Hospital, Medical Corps, Surgeon General's Headquarters, Tel Hashomer, Israel; Hebrew University, Faculty of Medicine, Military Program, Jerusalem, Israel

Ofer Merin, MD, MHA

Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps Field Hospital, Trauma unit, Shaare Zedek Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel (affiliated with the Hebrew University)

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Published

10/01/2017

How to Cite

Naor, PhD, M., S. N. Heyman, MD, T. Bader, MD, MHA, and O. Merin, MD, MHA. “Deployment of Field Hospitals to Disaster Regions: Insights from Ten Medical Relief Operations Spanning Three Decades”. American Journal of Disaster Medicine, vol. 12, no. 4, Oct. 2017, pp. 243-56, doi:10.5055/ajdm.2017.0277.

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