Factors influencing the pre-hospital management of civilian burn mass casualty incidents in the 21st century: a scoping review
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36997Dato
2025-05-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Objectives - Identify, categorise, and describe key themes and factors reported as having a favourable or detrimental influence on the professional management of civilian BMCIs.
Materials and methods - A scoping review following the Arksey and O’Malley framework with enhancements by Levac, Colquhoun and O’Brien, and PRISMA-ScR, was conducted using six electronic databases, including a search for grey literature from January 2001 to March 2024. A total of 51 documents, containing descriptions, discussions, and/or experiences of the pre-hospital management of burn mass casualty incidents in civilian, non-war settings, were included and analysed using thematic analysis for qualitative data and labelled for themes and factors.
Results - Thirteen key themes and 71 factors were identified to influence the pre-hospital management of BMCIs. The key themes were Command, Communication, Contextual, Education, Environment, Evacuation, Fortuity, Human Factors, Preparedness, Response Tactics, Safety, Triage, and Volunteer. The 71 identified factors were for example self-evacuation, varied non-medical transport methods, traffic congestion and decontamination.
Conclusion - The identified themes and factors provide insights from real-life incidents on what is reported to influence the situation at hand. The identified factors can be used to target specific areas for further improvement in future BMCIs, particularly in preparedness planning and training, for example by taking self-evacuation into account in future disaster plans.