Introduction to the Special Issue on Wars and Disasters: Advancing Care during Times of Crisis

Author:

Cancio Leopoldo C.1

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234, USA

Abstract

Civilian mass-casualty disasters and armed conflict share many features, including the fact that both maximally challenge multidisciplinary burn teams. Rigorous training is required to build teams and systems that can respond effectively. One of the critical but potentially overlooked components of readiness for crisis care is a robust clinical research program. Rather than stalling progress, disasters and conflict over the last 100 years consistently energized advances in care. This was made possible by the hard work of our predecessors to learn from the crisis in the midst of the crisis, and resulted in significant reductions in postburn mortality. Now, further work is needed not only to maintain these improvements in mortality, but also to understand the long-term functional outcomes and to improve the quality of life of burn survivors. Clinical research programs to address these issues must be established now, so that we are optimally prepared for the next conflict or disaster.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference23 articles.

1. Allbutt, T.C. (1905). The Historical Relations of Medicine and Surgery to the End of the Sixteenth Century: An Address Delivered at the St. Louis Congress in 1904, Macmillan.

2. Gillies, H.D. (1920). Plastic Surgery of the Face Based on Selected Cases of War Injuries of the Face Including Burns with Original Illustrations, H. Frowde.

3. The physiology and experimental treatment of poisoning with the lethal war gases;Underhill;Arch. Intern. Med.,1919

4. The significance of anhydremia in extensive superficial burns;Underhill;JAMA,1930

5. Mayhew, E.R. (2004). The Reconstruction of Warriors: Archibald McIndoe, the Royal Air Force and the Guinea Pig Club, Greenhill Books.

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