Stein Christopher, Mould-Millman Nee-Kofi, De Vries Shaheem, Wallis Lee
Department of Emergency Medical Care, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Johannesburg, P O Box 524, Auckland Park, Johannesburg 2006, South Africa.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado, School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Afr J Emerg Med. 2016 Sep;6(3):158-161. doi: 10.1016/j.afjem.2016.08.008. Epub 2016 Sep 6.
Out-of-hospital emergency care (OHEC) should be accessible to all who require it. However, available data suggests that there are a number of barriers to such access in Africa, mainly centred around challenges in public knowledge, perception and appropriate utilisation of OHEC. Having reached consensus in 2013 on a two-tier system of African OHEC, the African Federation for Emergency Medicine (AFEM) OHEC Group sought to gain further consensus on the narrower subject of access to OHEC in Africa. The objective of this paper is to report the outputs and statements arising from the AFEM OHEC access consensus meeting held in Cape Town, South Africa in April 2015. The discussion was structured around six dimensions of access to care (i.e. awareness, availability, accessibility, accommodation, affordability and acceptability) and tackled both Tier-1 (community first responder) and Tier-2 (formal prehospital services and Emergency Medical Services) OHEC systems. In Tier-1 systems, the role of community involvement and support was emphasised, along with the importance of a first responder system acceptable to the community in which it is embedded in order to optimise access. In Tier-2 systems, the consensus group highlighted the primacy of a single toll-free emergency number, matching of Emergency Medical Services resource demand and availability through appropriate planning and the cost-free nature of Tier-2 emergency care, amongst other factors that impact accessibility. Much work is still needed in prioritising the steps and clarifying the tools and metrics that would enable the ideal of optimal access to OHEC in Africa.
所有有需求的人都应能够获得院外急救服务(OHEC)。然而,现有数据表明,在非洲,获得此类服务存在一些障碍,主要集中在公众对院外急救服务的认知、观念以及合理利用方面的挑战。非洲急诊医学联合会(AFEM)院外急救服务小组在2013年就非洲两级院外急救服务系统达成共识后,试图就非洲获得院外急救服务这一更为具体的主题达成进一步共识。本文的目的是报告2015年4月在南非开普敦举行的AFEM院外急救服务获取共识会议的成果和声明。讨论围绕获得医疗服务的六个维度(即知晓度、可及性、可达性、适应性、可负担性和可接受性)展开,并涉及一级(社区第一响应者)和二级(正规院前服务和紧急医疗服务)院外急救服务系统。在一级系统中,强调了社区参与和支持的作用,以及一个嵌入其中的社区可接受的第一响应者系统对于优化服务获取的重要性。在二级系统中,共识小组强调了单一免费急救号码的首要性、通过适当规划使紧急医疗服务资源需求与可及性相匹配,以及二级紧急医疗服务的免费性质等影响可达性的其他因素。在确定优先步骤以及明确能够实现非洲理想的最佳院外急救服务获取的工具和指标方面,仍有许多工作要做。