Publications by authors named "Husum Hans"

To evaluate the teaching effect of a trauma training program in emergency cranial neurosurgery in Cambodia on surgical outcomes for patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). We analyzed the data of TBI patients who received emergency burr-hole trephination or craniotomy from a prospective, descriptive cohort study at the Military Region 5 Hospital between January 2015 and December 2016. TBI patients who underwent emergency cranial neurosurgery were primarily young men, with acute epidural hematoma (EDH) and acute subdural hematoma (SDH) as the most common diagnoses and with long transfer delay.

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Background and aims The aim of the study was to examine the effect of mirror and tactile therapy on phantom and stump pain in patients with traumatic amputations, with particular reference to amputees in low-income communities. Methods The study was conducted with an open, randomized, semi-crossover case-control design in rural Cambodia. A study sample of 45 landmine victims with trans-tibial amputations was allocated to three treatment arms; mirror therapy, tactile therapy, and combined mirror-and-tactile therapy.

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Introduction: A prospective interventional study has been carried out on the teaching effect and sustainability of low-cost trauma training program in open tibia fracture management for health workers.

Materials And Methods: In 2007, an external fixator and a patella-bearing orthosis were developed at a rural workshop in Cambodia. From 2010 to 2016, a core group of nine Cambodian health workers was trained in open fracture management by Norwegian senior surgeons, using the locally made fixator and brace.

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Objective: The majority of maternal and perinatal deaths are preventable, but still women and newborns die due to insufficient Basic Life Support in low-resource communities. Drawing on experiences from successful wartime trauma systems, a three-tier chain-of-survival model was introduced as a means to reduce rural maternal and perinatal mortality.

Methods: A study area of 266 villages in landmine-infested Northwestern Cambodia were selected based on remoteness and poverty.

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Background: Opioid analgesics are used in most trauma systems, and only a few studies report on the use of ketamine for prehospital analgesia. In a low-cost rural trauma system in Iraq paramedics have been using prehospital ketamine analgesia for ten years. This study aims to evaluate the effects of prehospital analgesia on physiologic trauma severity indicators and compare the effect of ketamine and pentazocine on those indicators.

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Background: The use of opioid analgesics in prehospital trauma care has been reported to have negative side effects on the airway and circulation. Several studies of urban trauma management have recommend ketamine as a safe and efficient analgesic. To date, however, no controlled trials of prehospital opioid analgesics versus ketamine in rural trauma management have been published.

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The study examines the epidemiology of cluster weapon and land mine accidents in Quang Tri Province since the end of the Vietnam War. The province is located just south of the demarcation line and was the province most affected during the war. In 2009, a cross sectional household study was conducted in all nine districts of the province.

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Background & Objectives: Safe blood and blood products should be offered to all patients in need for blood transfusion. The objectives of the present study were to establish prevalence estimates for hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus infections as a foundation for safe blood transfusion in rural Vietnam, and to check the accuracy of the laboratory analysis used for hepatitis testing of blood donors in Vietnam.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in two rural communities in Quang Tri, Vietnam.

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Introduction: In low-resource communities with long prehospital transport times, most trauma deaths occur outside the hospital. Previous studies from Iraq demonstrate that a two-tier network of rural paramedics with village-based first helpers reduces mortality in land mine and war-injured from 40% to 10%. However, these studies of prehospital trauma care in low-income countries have been conducted with historical controls, thus the results may be unreliable due to differences in study contexts.

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Background: Blunt implementation of Western trauma system models is not feasible in low-resource communities with long prehospital transit times. The aims of the study were to evaluate to which extent a low-cost prehospital trauma system reduces trauma deaths where prehospital transit times are long, and to identify specific life support interventions that contributed to survival.

Methods: In the study period from 1997 to 2006, 2,788 patients injured by land mines, war, and traffic accidents were managed by a chain-of-survival trauma system where non-graduate paramedics were the key care providers.

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Introduction: Recent studies demonstrate that early, in-field, basic life support by paramedics improves trauma survival where prehospital transport times are long. So far, no case-control studies of the effect of layperson trauma first responders have been reported. It was hypothesized that trained layperson first responders improve trauma outcomes where prehospital transit times are long.

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The aim of this study was to determine the accuracy of rapid tests for HBsAg, anti-HBc and anti-HCV in rural Cambodia and Vietnam to detect hepatitis B and C. In a cross-sectional epidemiological study of two populations of 1,200 potential blood donors in rural Cambodia and Vietnam the prevalence rates of HBsAg, anti-HBc and anti-HCV as established by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) tests were compared to rapid test outcomes. The EIA reference test results were validated by Architect Chemiluminescent Microparticle Immunoassay (CMIA) technique.

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Background: The management strategies for reconstruction of soft-tissue defects of the lower leg and the foot remain disputed. To date, no comprehensive studies have been reported on the saphenous perforator flaps in reconstructive surgery in patients with posttraumatic osteomyelitis.

Material: Fifty patients with lower leg postinjury chronic osteomyelitis were included in a retrospective, noncontrolled clinical study conducted from 1995 to 2006.

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The aims of the present study were to provide accurate prevalence of acute and occult hepatis B infection and hepatis C infection among potential blood donors in Cambodia and to study the accuracy of ELISA tests used for blood donor screening. A cross-sectional study was performed on samples collected from potential volunteer blood donors (n = 1,200) in two districts in rural Cambodia. The samples were tested using the ELISA technique for HBsAg, anti-HBc, and anti-HCV at a local blood bank.

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Introduction: Due to the accelerating global epidemic of trauma, efficient and sustainable models of trauma care that fit low-resource settings must be developed. In most low-income countries, the burden of surgical trauma is managed by non-doctors at local district hospitals.

Objective: This study examined whether it is possible to establish primary trauma surgical services of acceptable quality at rural district hospitals by systematically training local, non-graduate, care providers.

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Background: Severe wartime injuries often require microsurgical reconstruction or pedicle flap transfer. The aim of the study is to explore if such reconstructive surgery can be performed under low-resource conditions in a rural area.

Methods: A clinical intervention study was performed at rural hospital in a war scenario in the Balkans.

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Background: Of all deaths from injury, 90% occur in low- and middle-income countries, and most of the injured die before reaching a hospital. We have previously shown that a rural trauma system in Northern Iraq significantly reduced mortality in victims of mines and war injuries. In this follow-up study, we evaluated the adaptation and maturation of the system to changing injury patterns, focusing on mortality, time intervals from injury to medical help, and treatment effect on the physiologic impact of injuries.

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Purpose: We need solid estimates of maternal mortality rates (MMR) to monitor the impact of maternal care programs. Cambodian health authorities and WHO report the MMR in Cambodia at 450 per 100,000 live births. The figure is drawn from surveys where information is obtained by interviewing respondents about the survival of all their adult sisters (sisterhood method).

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Most programs to reduce maternity deaths focus on hospital performance and general obstetric protocols. In communities where most mothers deliver at home, such strategies will not reduce avoidable deaths. The key concept in the actual intervention is to regard deliveries in poor rural communities as a trauma and to merge midwives and traditional birth attendants (TBAs) with an already existing and successful rural trauma rescue system.

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