Burkle Frederick M
Center for Disaster and Refugee Studies, Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2006 Nov;13(11):1118-29. doi: 10.1197/j.aem.2006.06.040. Epub 2006 Oct 2.
Both the naturally occurring and deliberate release of a biological agent in a population can bring catastrophic consequences. Although these bioevents have similarities with other disasters, there also are major differences, especially in the approach to triage management of surge capacity resources. Conventional mass-casualty events use uniform methods for triage on the basis of severity of presentation and do not consider exposure, duration, or infectiousness, thereby impeding control of transmission and delaying recognition of victims requiring immediate care. Bioevent triage management must be population based, with the goal of preventing secondary transmission, beginning at the point of contact, to control the epidemic outbreak. Whatever triage system is used, it must first recognize the requirements of those Susceptible but not exposed, those Exposed but not yet infectious, those Infectious, those Removed by death or recovery, and those protected by Vaccination or prophylactic medication (SEIRV methodology). Everyone in the population falls into one of these five categories. This article addresses a population approach to SEIRV-based triage in which decision making falls under a two-phase system with specific measures of effectiveness to increase likelihood of medical success, epidemic control, and conservation of scarce resources.
生物制剂在人群中的自然释放和蓄意释放都可能带来灾难性后果。尽管这些生物事件与其他灾害有相似之处,但也存在重大差异,尤其是在激增能力资源的分诊管理方法上。传统的大规模伤亡事件基于临床表现的严重程度采用统一的分诊方法,不考虑暴露情况、持续时间或传染性,从而阻碍了传播控制,并延误了对需要立即治疗的受害者的识别。生物事件分诊管理必须以人群为基础,目标是从接触点开始预防二次传播,以控制疫情爆发。无论使用何种分诊系统,它都必须首先识别那些易感但未暴露、暴露但尚未感染、已感染、因死亡或康复而被排除以及通过疫苗接种或预防性药物得到保护的人群(SEIRV方法)。人群中的每个人都属于这五类中的一类。本文探讨了一种基于SEIRV的人群分诊方法,其中决策分为两个阶段,并有具体的有效性措施,以提高医疗成功、疫情控制和节约稀缺资源的可能性。