Post-war development of emergency medicine in Kosovo. Emerg Med J 2007 Jan;24(1):18-21
Date
12/22/2006Pubmed ID
17183036Pubmed Central ID
PMC2658142DOI
10.1136/emj.2006.035998Scopus ID
2-s2.0-33846275848 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 3 CitationsAbstract
OBJECTIVES: To (1) investigate emergency medical care priorities in Kosovo, (2) assess Kosovo's post-war development of emergency medical services and (3) identify expectations.
METHODS: An instrument with seven open-ended questions, approved by the institutional review board, was designed for in-person interviews (preferred) or written survey. The survey was administered in October 2003 at the Kosovo University Clinical Center, Pristina, Kosovo, and one regional hospital. Targeted participants were emergency care providers, clinical consultants and health policy consultants. Surveys were conducted by interview with simultaneous interpretation by a native Albanian speaker, an orthopaedic surgeon or in written Albanian form. The responses were evaluated quantitatively and qualitatively.
RESULTS: 13 respondents participated in the study: 10 gave interviews and 3 provided written response; 7 were emergency care providers, 4 were emergency care consultants and 2 were health policy consultants. Emergency care priorities were defined as trauma, cardiac disease and suicide. Most respondents believed that emergency medicine as a specialised field was a post-war development. The international community was credited with the provision of infrastructure, supplies and training. Most respondents denied any harm from international assistance. However, some respondents described instances of inappropriate international investment. Ongoing needs are training of providers and equipping of facilities and vehicles. Improved hospital management, political administration and international involvement are thought to be necessary for continued development.
CONCLUSIONS: Survey respondents agreed on priorities in emergency care, credited the international community with development to date, and identified administrative structures and international training support as the keys to ongoing development.
Author List
O'Hanlon KP, Lerner EBMESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
Data CollectionEmergency Medicine
Humans
Interdisciplinary Communication
Medical Audit
Needs Assessment
Warfare
Yugoslavia









