Hart Alexander, Chai Peter R, Griswold Matthew K, Lai Jeffrey T, Boyer Edward W, Broach John
Fellow in Disaster Medicine, Clinical Instructor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Westborough, Massachusetts.
Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Disaster Med. 2017 Fall;12(4):261-265. doi: 10.5055/ajdm.2017.0279.
This study seeks to understand the acceptability and perceived utility of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology to Mass Casualty Incidents (MCI) scene management.
Qualitative questionnaires regarding the ease of operation, perceived usefulness, and training time to operate UAVs were administered to Emergency Medical Technicians (n = 15).
A Single Urban New England Academic Tertiary Care Medical Center.
Front-line emergency medical service (EMS) providers and senior EMS personnel in Incident Commander roles.
Data from this pilot study indicate that EMS responders are accepting to deploying and operating UAV technology in a disaster scenario. Additionally, they perceived UAV technology as easy to adopt yet impactful in improving MCI scene management.
本研究旨在了解无人机技术在大规模伤亡事件(MCI)现场管理中的可接受性和感知效用。
对15名急救医疗技术人员进行了关于无人机操作简易性、感知有用性和操作培训时间的定性问卷调查。
新英格兰地区一个城市的单一学术三级医疗中心。
担任事件指挥官角色的一线紧急医疗服务(EMS)提供者和高级EMS人员。
这项试点研究的数据表明,EMS响应人员愿意在灾难场景中部署和操作无人机技术。此外,他们认为无人机技术易于采用且对改善MCI现场管理有显著影响。