Emergency Care Saves Lives

Emergency Care Saves Lives

25x25

WHO
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Initiative aiming to provide access to Basic Emergency Care training for nurses and midwives from 25 countries by the end of 2025.

The Disease Control Priorities project (2018) estimates that more than half of deaths and a third of disability in low- and middle-income countries could be addressed by effective emergency care. Injuries alone killed 4.4 million people around the world in 2019, and constitute 8% of all deaths.

Health emergencies happen every day, everywhere. Emergency care is required to respond to a wide range of conditions in children and adults – including injuries, infections, heart attacks and strokes, asthma and complications of pregnancy.

Emergency care providers save lives. Yet in resource-limited settings, care is often compromised by a lack of training. This can result in a failure to recognize urgency, provide initial appropriate care, and a delay in  onward referrals.

The result can be catastrophic, with research showing that over half of all annual deaths, and over a third of disability in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) result from conditions that could be treated by trained emergency care professionals.

"Emergency care is in a state of emergency. As the reality of war, climate change, and global pandemics become ever more real, the pressure is building. If we don’t act, the systems we all rely on will break. With your support we can close a critical skills gap and strengthen emergency care services by bringing BEC training to nurses and midwives at the forefront of health care." Dr Amelia Latu Afuhaamango Tuipulotu, Chief Nursing Officer, WHO

The need for high quality training

The workforce is the backbone of any health system, with nurses and midwives playing a key role in the management of emergency medical situations. Yet the availability and quality of emergency care training for these health professionals varies widely– with many countries offering little formal training or none at all. Where courses do exist, materials are often limited in scope, high in cost and unsuitable for use in low-resource settings. 

 

WHO-ICRC Basic Emergency Care: approach to the acutely ill and injured
Open-access training course for frontline healthcare providers who manage acute illness and injury with limited resources.

A short course that makes a big difference

Launched in 2016, the Basic Emergency Care (BEC) course was developed by the World Health Organization, the International Committee of the Red Cross and International Federation for Emergency Medicine. It is designed to help health-care workers manage acute life-threatening conditions in any health care facility, anywhere in the world.

Open source and free to access, the course includes a combination of lectures, case scenarios and hands-on skills sessions to teach a systematic (ABCDE) approach to emergency care – with modules focused on life-saving interventions for acutely ill patients suffering trauma, difficulty in breathing, shock and altered mental status. 

Today, over 15 000 health care providers in 60 countries have received BEC training. Yet uptake among nurses and midwives – who represent 59% of the global health workforce – is low, with numbers trained estimated at just 25% of total participants.

Quote from recipient of the Basic Emergency Care Training:

“He was the first person I saved after being trained in the Basic Emergency Care course (…) We placed an oral airway and gave him supplemental oxygen. Two hours later he regained consciousness.”  Halimah Adam, Uganda

 

People attending a training on basic emergency care
WHO / Matt Dolan
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