View allAll Photos Tagged TraumaCare

Picture shows : A man with a briefcase waits by a taxi stand with his arm outstretched to flag down a passing cab. Behind him a man walks, holding his daughters hand, towards the public entrance to the Emergency Department as a man with his leg in a cast and using crutches, walks away from A&E. A Mercedes Benz Sprinter box body Emergency Ambulance or “Ambaileans Eiginn” of the Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) pulls up to bring another patient to Hospital.

To the left, a Patient Transport Service (PTS) ambulance is parked facing the windows of the Acute Assessment Unit (AAU) which is joined on to the Emergency Dept. Next to the PTS vehicle, SAS staff stand next to an Urgent Tier Ambulance.

Diorama - Mossend District General Hospital.

Scale - 1:76, OO Gauge.

 

Ambulance and Emergency Medical Services in Scotland are provided by the Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS), a special Health Board of the greater National Health Service (NHS) Scotland. SAS provides these services throughout all of mainland Scotland and the Islands. Emergency Medical Services are provided by the Accident & Emergency branch, providing Double Crewed Ambulances typically formed of a Paramedic and Technician, but which can be formed of double Tech or Para crews. Single Paramedics in cars, motorbikes or bicycles are Paramedic Response Units, used to provide immediate pre-hospital care to patients, or treating and discharging at scene. Also part of the A&E branch is the Urgent Tier service, using crews formed of an Ambulance Technician and Care Assistant, Urgent Tier convey patients who have been urgently referred to Hospital. The patients General Practitioner can request admission within a 1-4 hour timeframe. As such Urgent Tier vehicles use their emergency warning systems less than standard A&E crews. Due to the presence of a qualified Technician however UT resources can be used as a first responder to immediately life threatening calls.

 

SAS also has an Emergency Medical Retrieval Service (ScotSTAR), bringing Medical and Nursing care to patients as they transfer between Hospitals. Scotland is the only part of the UK to provide fully government funded Air Ambulance services, with two fixed wing and two rotary aircraft. They are assisted by the Scottish Charity Air Ambulance who provide additional cover with two helicopters of their own.

 

Special Operations Response Team (SORT) provide an emergency response to complex rescue, CBRN, terrorist attacks and other such incidents.

 

Scheduled Care is provided by the Patient Transport Service, the non-emergency branch of SAS. Using a variety of vehicles from cars, people carriers, minibuses and minibus conversion ambulances, PTS provides transport to and from outpatient clinics, for planned admissions and discharges. Staff crewing PTS vehicles are called Ambulance Care Assistants (ACA). They are experts in moving and handling, whereas A&E crews frequently remove patients from houses using equipment such as carry chairs, ACA’s must be adept at taking their patients back up stairs as well as extrications.

 

As with the majority of healthcare in Scotland, ambulance and emergency medical services are free at the point of use. Funded by National Insurance contributions made by those in work, Scots are extremely proud and defensive of our NHS. We generally believe that everyone should pay towards the common fund to ensure no-one has their life destroyed by medical costs, as illness and injury are not a choice. Having worked in the NHS and with SAS myself, I have resuscitated a man having a heart attack, conveyed him to Hospital, watched as Coronary Care staff removed the blockage from his artery and left the man sitting up in bed in CCU. Knowing that he will be repatriated to his nearest General Hospital for Coronary Rehab and will go home to ongoing care in the community. That man could take time to recover, safe in the knowledge that no crippling bill or endless fights with healthcare insurance would befall him. That is our NHS, that is why we love it and cannot understand the US system.

INDIAN OCEAN (Jan. 20, 2022) Lt. Minghe Zang, left, a dental officer assigned to amphibious transport dock USS Portland (LPD 27), and Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Tristan Rowley, assigned to Alpha Company Battalion Landing Team 1/1, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), triage a simulated casualty during a mass casualty training event aboard Portland. 11th MEU and Essex Amphibious Ready Group are operating in U.S. 7th Fleet to enhance interoperability with alliances and partners and serve as a ready response force to ensure maritime security and a free and open Indo-Pacific region. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Patrick Katz)

INDIAN OCEAN (Jan. 20, 2022) U.S. Sailors assigned to amphibious transport dock USS Portland (LPD 27), strap a simulated casualty to a stretcher during a mass casualty exercise aboard Portland. 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit and Essex Amphibious Ready Group are operating in U.S. 7th Fleet to enhance interoperability with alliances and partners and serve as a ready response force to ensure maritime security and a free and open Indo-Pacific region. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Patrick Katz)

Diorama - Mossend District General Hospital. Built using Kingsway Models kit of Holby Accident & Emergency department from BBC show Casualty.

 

Depicted in this layout is Mossend’s Emergency Department, with the public entrance in the centre and doors direct to the Resuscitation area and Ambulance only entrance to the right by the marked bays. The two bays closest to this door are marked as “Resus Only” and are designated for ambulances who have called ahead with a Stand By call, pre-alerting Resus staff of their arrival. One of SAS’ Mercedes Sprinter vehicles is parked in the first bay, and one half of the crew is seen standing nearby. This figure came from a cheap multipack of generic pedestrian figures. After painting this one in all over white, I went on to use paint pens, including hi-vis yellow and silver for his jacket. Painting him into SAS A&E uniform. I have subsequently painted a number of other figures into this uniform, minus the jacket, and one figure who now wears the light blue of the old Patient Transport Service (PTS) uniform.

 

Mossend also has an Acute Assessment Unit (AAU) for same day and GP admissions, the door for this is to the left. Two Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) Urgent Tier vehicles are parked outside the AAU. Both of these models are code 3 adaptions of a general release. They have been given SAS livery to depict older style Urgent Tier vehicles. Urgent Tier are part of A&E operations but utilise a mixed crew of an Ambulance Technician as attendant (clinician) and a CERAD trained Ambulance Care Assistant from the PTS side of operations as driver. These crews respond to GP requests for admissions within 1-4 hours, in addition to inter-hospital transfers, urgent hospice admissions and more. Because the driver is emergency response authorised, and the Technician has Airway management and manual defibrillation training, UT crews can additionally be allocated to Immediately Life Threatening (red or purple coded) calls as a first response to be backed up by a full A&E crew with Paramedic onboard.

 

Parked in the centre of the picture are two further emergency service vehicles. The local Roads Policing Unit (RPU) or “Traffic Cops” are represented here with a Volvo V70 traffic car. Potentially linked to both this sleek Police car and the Sprinter van in Resus bay one, is the blue light BMW of the Trauma Team also parked in front of the Emergency Department.

 

Ambulance and Emergency Medical Services in Scotland are provided by the Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS), a special Health Board of the greater National Health Service (NHS) Scotland. SAS provides these services throughout all of mainland Scotland and the Islands. Emergency Medical Services are provided by the Accident & Emergency branch, providing Double Crewed Ambulances typically formed of a Paramedic and Technician, but which can be formed of double Tech or Para crews. Single Paramedics in cars, motorbikes or bicycles are Paramedic Response Units, used to provide immediate pre-hospital care to patients, or treating and discharging at scene. Also part of the A&E branch is the Urgent Tier service, using crews formed of an Ambulance Technician and Care Assistant, Urgent Tier convey patients who have been urgently referred to Hospital. The patients General Practitioner can request admission within a 1-4 hour timeframe. As such Urgent Tier vehicles use their emergency warning systems less than standard A&E crews. Due to the presence of a qualified Technician however UT resources can be used as a first responder to immediately life threatening calls.

 

SAS also has an Emergency Medical Retrieval Service (ScotSTAR), bringing Medical and Nursing care to patients as they transfer between Hospitals. Scotland is the only part of the UK to provide fully government funded Air Ambulance services, with two fixed wing and two rotary aircraft. They are assisted by the Scottish Charity Air Ambulance who provide additional cover with two helicopters of their own.

 

Special Operations Response Team (SORT) provide an emergency response to complex rescue, CBRN, terrorist attacks and other such incidents.

 

Scheduled Care is provided by the Patient Transport Service, the non-emergency branch of SAS. Using a variety of vehicles from cars, people carriers, minibuses and minibus conversion ambulances, PTS provides transport to and from outpatient clinics, for planned admissions and discharges. Staff crewing PTS vehicles are called Ambulance Care Assistants (ACA). They are experts in moving and handling, whereas A&E crews frequently remove patients from houses using equipment such as carry chairs, ACA’s must be adept at taking their patients back up stairs as well as extrications.

 

As with the majority of healthcare in Scotland, ambulance and emergency medical services are free at the point of use. Funded by National Insurance contributions made by those in work, Scots are extremely proud and defensive of our NHS. We generally believe that everyone should pay towards the common fund to ensure no-one has their life destroyed by medical costs, as illness and injury are not a choice. Having worked in the NHS and with SAS myself, I have resuscitated a man having a heart attack, conveyed him to Hospital, watched as Coronary Care staff removed the blockage from his artery and left the man sitting up in bed in CCU. Knowing that he will be repatriated to his nearest General Hospital for Coronary Rehab and will go home to ongoing care in the community. That man could take time to recover, safe in the knowledge that no crippling bill or endless fights with healthcare insurance would befall him. That is our NHS, that is why we love it and cannot understand the US system.

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CONTINGENCY OPERATING LOCATION K1, Iraq – During a mass casualty exercise at Contingency Operating Location K1, combat medics of 12th Iraqi Army Division provide emergency medical care to a “notional” casualty, simulating wounds as part of a training scenario led by medics of 1st Advise and Assist Task Force, 1st Infantry Division, March 23, 2011. Designed to test 12th IA Div. medics’ ability to treat patients under the pressures of combat, the exercise presented realistic scenarios and stressors, such as taking enemy fire, to validate the Iraqi soldiers’ training provided by U.S. Army medics of Company C, 101st Brigade Support Battalion, 1st AATF, 1st Inf. Div.

(U.S. Army photo by Spc. Kandi Huggins, 1st AATF PAO, 1st Inf. Div., USD-N)

 

CONTINGENCY OPERATING LOCATION K1, Iraq – Combat medics of 12th Iraqi Army Division run to a simulated crash site during a mass casualty exercise at Contingency Operating Location K1, March 23, 2011. U.S. Soldiers of 1st Advise and Assist Task Force, 1st Infantry Division led the training to test the effectiveness of the IA medics to triage and care for a large number of casualties in the event of an emergency.

(U.S. Army photo by Spc. Kandi Huggins, 1st AATF PAO, 1st Inf. Div., USD-N)

 

Ahmad Ababkr Bahkit getting measured for a prosthetic leg inside HI rehabilitation centre.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

Face paint.

CONTINGENCY OPERATING LOCATION K1, Iraq – Sgt. 1st Class William Wright, combat medic and senior medical advisor at Contingency Operating Location K1, applies face paint to a medic of the 12th Iraqi Army Division, creating a moulage of mock injuries, adding a sense of realism to a mass casualty exercise, March 23, 2011. Wright and other medics of Company C, 101st Brigade Support Battalion, 1st Advise and Assist Task Force, 1st Infantry Division, supervised the MASCAL, observing the IA medics’ ability to respond, mitigate and recover multiple simulated casualties in during an emergency.

(US Army Photo by Spc. Kandi Huggins, 1st AATF PAO, 1st Inf. Div., USD-N)

 

Litters.

CONTINGENCY OPERATING LOCATION K1, Iraq – Combat medics of 12th Iraqi Army Division run to a simulated crash site during a mass casualty exercise at Contingency Operating Location K1, March 23, 2011. U.S. Soldiers of 1st Advise and Assist Task Force, 1st Infantry Division led the training to test the effectiveness of the IA medics to triage and care for a large number of casualties in the event of an emergency.

(U.S. Army photo by Spc. Kandi Huggins, 1st AATF PAO, 1st Inf. Div., USD-N)

 

United States Marine Corps Captain Andrew Hairston of Wounded Warrior Battalion-East participates in a one-mile walk held at Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune on May 18. Hairston suffered a traumatic injury more than a year prior. The Trauma Survivors walk was a significant milestone for the Marine who said the day marked the one-year anniversary of his first steps on his prosthetic leg at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Hairston is now a paracyclist who will be representing his home, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Marine Corps in August's Warrior Games.

Care under fire.

CONTINGENCY OPERATING LOCATION K1, Iraq – During a mass casualty exercise at Contingency Operating Location K1, combat medics of 12th Iraqi Army Division provide emergency medical care to a “notional” casualty, simulating wounds as part of a training scenario led by medics of 1st Advise and Assist Task Force, 1st Infantry Division, March 23, 2011. Designed to test 12th IA Div. medics’ ability to treat patients under the pressures of combat, the exercise presented realistic scenarios and stressors, such as taking enemy fire, to validate the Iraqi soldiers’ training provided by U.S. Army medics of Company C, 101st Brigade Support Battalion, 1st AATF, 1st Inf. Div.

(U.S. Army photo by Spc. Kandi Huggins, 1st AATF PAO, 1st Inf. Div., USD-N)

 

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Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune staff walk along trauma survivors on National Trauma Survivors Day. The day is celebrated each year on May 18 in honor of the challenges and triumphs of trauma patients.

NMCCL medical staff were joined by several former trauma patients on a one-mile walk in their honor.

Manipal Hospital has the best department of accident and emergency care. It is a 24-hour fully-equipped medical centre,ambulance service in Salem which caters to all kinds of accident cases.

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Trauma survivors participate in a one-mile walk on May 18, 2022. Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune staff recognized National Trauma Survivors Day, a day meant to honor of the challenges and triumphs of trauma survivors.

Former trauma patients gather for NMCCL's observance of National Trauma Survivors Day on May 18, 2022. The day honors of the challenges and triumphs of trauma survivors.

Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune staff walk along trauma survivors on National Trauma Survivors Day. The day is celebrated each year on May 18 in honor of the challenges and triumphs of trauma patients.

NMCCL medical staff were joined by several former trauma patients on a one-mile walk in their honor.

Naval Medical Center CAmp Lejeune staff walk along trauma survivors on National Trauma Survivors Day. The day is celebrated each year on May 18 in honor of the challenges and triumps of trauma patients.

NMCCL medical staff were joined by several former trauma patients on a one-mile walk in their honor.

Noble Hospital Emergency Department and ICU are designed in such a way that emergency support is available within minutes of arrival to provide life-saving care.

 

To consult our experts, Call: 800 700 6611 or visit www.noblehospitalspune.com/specialities/critical-care/ to schedule an appointment today

 

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At Criticare's Neurology department, you can find the expert care you need for neurological disorders. Our team of specialists is dedicated to offering individualized care to people with neurological diseases so they can recover and enhance their quality of life.

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Alsadik Isshak Arbab in Aboutengue camp.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

Ahmad Ababkr Bahkit getting measured for a prosthetic leg inside HI rehabilitation centre.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

A crochet and weave activity in the outside space of the HI centre in Aboutengue.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

A rehabilitation session inside EU-funded HI rehabilitation centre in Aboutengue camp.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

A crochet and weave activity in the outside space of the HI centre in Aboutengue.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

Shoor Hospitals provide emergency nurses with a practical guide to the systematic assessment and management of trauma patients

 

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A view on the outside of the EU-funded HI rehabilitation centre.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

A rehabilitation session inside EU-funded HI rehabilitation centre in Aboutengue camp.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

In life, at some point in time, everyone is faced with tough situations that might cast a negative effect which is also known as trauma. Most of the time people find it very difficult to come out of trauma which can lead to depression. Trauma could be caused due to losing a family member, friend or loved one. Trauma is not only limited to these situations as it can be caused due to other factors as well. Go through the infographic to know the process of healing from trauma.

reginafasold.tumblr.com/image/188555206937

 

Mohamad Isaac standing in front of EU-funded HI centre in Aboutengue: after his leg was amputated, he fell into a deep depression..

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

A rehabilitation session inside EU-funded HI rehabilitation centre in Aboutengue camp.

© UNHCR, 2024 (photographer: Nicolò Filippo Rosso). Licensed under conditions.

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