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Title: Organization and activity of the health service in the Croatian province of Lika in the first year of the war. Author: Vuckov S, Hebrang A, Tomljanović Z, Depolo A. Journal: Mil Med; 1998 Feb; 163(2):110-6. PubMed ID: 9503905. Abstract: The aim of this report is to present the various aspects of the reorganization of the health service in the Croatian province of Lika during the first year, 1991-1992, of the war in Croatia. In the former Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia, the health service was completely in the hands of the state, and Croatia was not able to transform it in the first year of its independence. The paper documents the personnel, supplies, and equipment that the health service of Lika had at its disposal in the first year of the war, the division of the health service into the stationary and front-line medical corps, and the evacuation protocols developed to transfer surgical patients to the rear-area hospital. The response of the health service allowed for rapid and successful patient treatment, emphasized by the fact that the usual time elapsed between wounding and delivery of the patient to the operating table was less than 30 minutes. All surgeries, with the exception of those involving severe craniocerebral injuries, were performed in the war hospitals of Lika. After stabilization of their postoperative condition, generally within 30 minutes, patients were evacuated to the rear-area hospital in Rijeka, with artificial respiration. The distance by road from the war hospitals in Otocac and Gospić to the reararea hospital in Rijeka was 120 and 170 km, respectively. Collectively, the results of our work demonstrate that a nonmilitary health service can be transformed successfully and efficiently into a war medical service. Yet, we believe that this is possible only under the extreme conditions of a defensive war.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]