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Factors causing emergency medical care overload during heatwaves: A Delphi study

Matteo Paganini, Hamdi Lamine, Françesco Della Corte, Ives Hubloue, Luca Ragazzoni, Francesco Barone‐Adesi

2023PLoS ONE10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Heatwaves pose an important risk for population health and are associated with an increased demand for emergency care. To find factors causing such overload, an online Delphi study included 15 experts in emergency medicine, disaster medicine, or public health. One open-ended question was delivered in the first round. After content analysis, the obtained statements were sent to the experts in two rounds to be rated on a 7-point linear scale. Consensus was defined as a standard deviation ≤ 1.0. Thirty-one statements were obtained after content analysis. The experts agreed on 18 statements, mostly focusing on the input section of patient processing and identifying stakeholders, the population, and primary care as targets of potential interventions. Additional dedicated resources and bed capacity were deemed important as per throughput and output sections, respectively. These findings could be used in the future to implement and test solutions to increase emergency healthcare resilience during heatwaves and reduce disaster risk due to climatic change.

Topics & Concepts

Delphi methodMedical emergencyResilience (materials science)Health careDisaster medicineMedicinePopulationPsychological interventionScale (ratio)Emergency medical servicesPublic healthMEDLINEEnvironmental healthPoison controlSuicide preventionEmergency medicineNursingComputer scienceEconomicsQuantum mechanicsThermodynamicsLawPhysicsArtificial intelligencePolitical scienceEconomic growthClimate Change and Health ImpactsDisaster Response and ManagementThermal Regulation in Medicine
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