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Ovagen

Glu-Asp-Leu, Liver Bioregulator Peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 34
Trials 30
2018 pubmed 21 citations

Prepared for Mission? A Survey of Medical Personnel Training Needs Within the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Haverkamp. Frederike J C FJC; Veen. Harald H; Hoencamp. Rigo R; Muhrbeck. Måns M; von Schreeb. Johan J; Wladis. Andreas A; Tan. Edward C T H ECTH

Key Findings

  • Medical personnel rated their preparedness for adult trauma higher (median 4/5) than for pediatric trauma (median 3/5).
  • Prior deployment experience and attendance at master classes (e.g., War Surgery Seminar) were linked to higher self‑perceived readiness.
  • The most requested additional training topics were pediatrics, fracture surgery, and burns.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or self‑experimenters, this paper offers little direct value because it focuses on humanitarian medical training, not on the peptide ovagen or personal health protocols. The findings are mainly relevant to organizations planning medical preparedness training.

Summary

This study surveyed Red Cross medical staff about how ready they felt for trauma work in disaster zones. They felt fairly prepared for adult injuries but less so for kids, and they asked for more training in pediatric care, bone fracture surgery, and burn treatment.

Abstract

Humanitarian organizations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) provide worldwide protection and medical assistance for victims of disaster and conflict. It is important to gain insight into the training needs of the medical professionals who are deployed to these resource scarce areas to optimally prepare them. This is the first study of its kind to assess the self-perceived preparedness, deployment experiences, and learning needs concerning medical readiness for deployment of ICRC medical personnel. All enlisted ICRC medical employees were invited to participate in a digital questionnaire conducted during March 2017. The survey contained questions about respondents' personal background, pre-deployment training, deployment experiences, self-perceived preparedness, and the personal impact of deployment. The response rate (consisting of nurses, surgeons, and anesthesiologists) was 54% (153/284). Respondents rated their self-perceived preparedness for adult trauma with a median score of 4.0 on a scale of 1 (very unprepared) to 5 (more than sufficient); and for pediatric trauma with a median score of 3.0. Higher rates of self-perceived preparedness were found in respondents who had previously been deployed with other organizations, or who had attended at least one master class, e.g., the ICRC War Surgery Seminar (p < 0.05). Additional training was requested most frequently for pediatrics (65/150), fracture surgery (46/150), and burns treatment (45/150). ICRC medical personnel felt sufficiently prepared for deployment. Key points for future ICRC pre-deployment training are to focus on pediatrics, fracture surgery, and burns treatment, and to ensure greater participation in master classes.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-05-02T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00268-018-4651-5

Citations

21

References

34