• Emerg. Med. Clin. North Am. · Feb 2005

    Review

    International humanitarian assistance: where do emergency physicians belong?

    • Michael VanRooyen, Raghu Venugopal, and P Gregg Greenough.
    • The Johns Hopkins Center for International Emergency, Disaster and Refugee Studies, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Bloomberg School of Public Health, 1830 E. Monument Street, Suite 6-100, Baltimore, MD 21305, USA. mvanrooy@jhmi.edu
    • Emerg. Med. Clin. North Am. 2005 Feb 1;23(1):115-31.

    AbstractAs human civilization faces new and challenging humanitarian crises, the entrance of EPs into the realm of HA is needed and timely. As noted by Jennifer Leaning [35], an EP at Harvard University, "Medical and public health personnel who respond to these crises enter a domain of perilous complexity. Road maps do not exist, but the possibility of good favors the prepared mind." Thus, with proper training in the principles of public health and experience, EPs have a tremendous opportunity to affect the realm of international HA, particularly via the analysis and development of international emergency health systems and building the capacity for effective relief. EPs with training in HA can be valuable assets to relief programs in the field and administratively, especially after the initial disaster and during the transition to health system reconstruction and development.

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