Lund Adam, Turris Sheila
1University of British Columbia,Mass-Gathering Medicine Interest Group,Department of Emergency Medicine,Vancouver,British Columbia,Canada.
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2017 Aug;32(4):437-443. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X1700022X. Epub 2017 Mar 20.
Despite the best efforts of event producers and on-site medical teams, there are sometimes serious illnesses, life-threatening injuries, and fatalities related to music festival attendance. Producers, clinicians, and researchers are actively seeking ways to reduce the mortality and morbidity associated with these events. After analyzing the available literature on music festival health and safety, several major themes emerged. Principally, stakeholder groups planning in isolation from one another (ie, in silos) create fragmentation, gaps, and overlap in plans for major planned events (MPEs). The authors hypothesized that one approach to minimizing this fragmentation may be to create a framework to "connect the dots," or join together the many silos of professionals responsible for safety, security, health, and emergency planning at MPEs. Adapted from the well-established literature regarding the management of cardiac arrests, both in and out of hospital, the "chain of survival" concept is applied to the disparate groups providing services that support event safety in the context of music festivals. The authors propose this framework for describing, understanding, coordinating and planning around the integration of safety, security, health, and emergency service for events. The adapted Event Chain of Survival contains six interdependent links, including: (1) event producers; (2) police and security; (3) festival health; (4) on-site medical services; (5) ambulance services; and (6) off-site medical services. The authors argue that adapting and applying this framework in the context of MPEs in general, and music festivals specifically, has the potential to break down the current disconnected approach to event safety, security, health, and emergency planning. It offers a means of shifting the focus from a purely reactive stance to a more proactive, collaborative, and integrated approach. Improving health outcomes for music festival attendees, reducing gaps in planning, promoting consistency, and improving efficiency by reducing duplication of services will ultimately require coordination and collaboration from the beginning of event production to post-event reporting. Lund A , Turris SA . The Event Chain of Survival in the context of music festivals: a framework for improving outcomes at major planned events. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2017;32(4):437-443.
尽管活动主办方和现场医疗团队已竭尽全力,但与参加音乐节相关的严重疾病、危及生命的伤害和死亡事件仍时有发生。主办方、临床医生和研究人员都在积极寻求降低这些活动相关死亡率和发病率的方法。在分析了关于音乐节健康与安全的现有文献后,出现了几个主要主题。主要问题是,各利益相关方群体彼此孤立地进行规划(即各自为政),导致重大活动(MPE)的计划出现碎片化、漏洞和重叠。作者推测,尽量减少这种碎片化的一种方法可能是创建一个框架来“连接各个环节”,或者将负责重大活动安全、安保、健康和应急规划的众多专业人员群体整合起来。借鉴关于院内外心脏骤停管理的成熟文献,“生存链”概念被应用于在音乐节背景下提供支持活动安全服务的不同群体。作者提出了这个框架,用于描述、理解、协调和规划活动中安全、安保、健康和应急服务的整合。改编后的活动生存链包含六个相互依存的环节,包括:(1)活动主办方;(2)警察和安保人员;(3)音乐节健康服务;(4)现场医疗服务;(5)救护车服务;(6)场外医疗服务。作者认为,在一般的重大活动,特别是音乐节的背景下采用并应用这个框架,有可能打破当前对活动安全、安保、健康和应急规划的脱节做法。它提供了一种将重点从纯粹的被动应对姿态转变为更积极主动、协作和综合方法的途径。要改善音乐节参与者的健康状况、减少规划漏洞、促进一致性并通过减少服务重复来提高效率,最终需要从活动筹备开始到活动后报告的整个过程中进行协调与合作。伦德 A,图里斯 SA。音乐节背景下的活动生存链:改善重大活动结果的框架。院前灾难医学。2017;32(4):437 - 443。