By Charles Ndyamwijuka | Operation Director
Emergency medical services (EMS) are an integral part of emergency care and crucial for the provision of immediate medical care in the pre-hospital setting. To assure an appropriate response, proper planning of EMS infrastructure is paramount. An increasing year-on-year utilization of emergency ambulances over the past years has been reported in many developed countries. In order to provide an adequate number of mobile EMS units it is important to monitor the use of pre-hospital EMS and to respond to changing patterns. It is also important that adequate care is delivered while on ambulance in both, urban and rural areas. Global Emergency Care (GEC) and the Uganda Ministry of Health (MOH) and other partners are currently refining the model to scale-up training of ambulance human Resource nationwide to be able to fulfill the vision of the MOH to rapidly build a pre- hospital care system over the next few years. Addressing the above problem, GEC Emergency Care Practitioners (ECP) are currently supporting national ambulance service center in Kampala a focus on responding to the most critical cases.
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