Safety First or Saving Lives? How Medical Responders Would Decide when Facing an Active Violent Incident. Results from an Explorative Cross-National Survey

IF 0.7 4区 管理学 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management Pub Date : 2024-05-29 DOI:10.1515/jhsem-2022-0051
Nils Ellebrecht, Anna Joval, Tomer Kaplan, Oren Wacht, Eric S. Weinstein
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Abstract

In recent years, public authorities and rescue services have been discussing how Medical First Responders (MFRs) should behave in an Active Violent Incident (AVI) where it is necessary to weigh up self-protection and the rescuing of others. The aim of this exploratory study is to generate a preliminary picture of how European MFRs position themselves on this and related questions. With the help of a network of experts, an AVI scenario and accompanying questionnaire were developed and pretested. A refined version was then distributed among MFRs in eight European countries and Israel. We performed descriptive statistics and tested for significant differences among the participating countries. 1164 MFRs completed the survey. In the absence of police protection, a majority of respondents opted against providing immediate casualty care (56.6 %). Under certain circumstances, however, the rest decided in favour. More than 65.5 % did not fear disciplinary or legal consequences for not providing assistance immediately. Even with police protection, one in ten respondents would still not enter a “yellow zone”, one in four would leave this to Emergency Medical Services (EMS) units specifically trained for such operations. While there are very few strong contrasts between MFRs with different work experience, roles (supervisor/instructor) or additional qualifications (e.g., firefighting, military service), there are significant differences between MFRs from participating countries. Most notably, (1) only Norwegian participants identified, on average, a clear paradigm shift from “safety first” to “controlled risk taking”; (2) while 69.8 % of the Austrian cohort were unwilling to enter without being escorted by the police, among Norwegians MFRs the figure was 42.7 %; (3) the question whether “weapons” are “useful” equipment in such a scenario is particularly divisive (ranging from 14.3 % of German to 58.9 % of Israeli respondents). Although most of the questions were answered in the same way by a large majority, significant differences can be observed, especially between countries. We offer various explanations for these and discuss whether MFRs can actually remain passive given the situational normative forces inherent to an AVI.
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安全第一还是拯救生命?医疗救援人员在面对现行暴力事件时如何抉择?一项跨国探索性调查的结果
近年来,公共当局和救援服务机构一直在讨论医疗急救人员(MFR)在主动暴力事件(AVI)中应如何行动,因为在这种情况下,有必要权衡自我保护和救助他人。这项探索性研究旨在初步了解欧洲医疗急救人员在这一问题及相关问题上的立场。在一个专家网络的帮助下,制定并预先测试了一个 AVI 情景和相应的调查问卷。然后在八个欧洲国家和以色列的军事观察员中分发了改进版。我们进行了描述性统计,并检验了参与国家之间的显著差异。共有 1164 名军事观察员完成了调查。在没有警察保护的情况下,大多数受访者选择不立即提供伤员救护(56.6%)。但在某些情况下,其余的人则表示赞成。超过 65.5 % 的受访者不担心不立即提供救助会带来纪律或法律后果。即使有警察保护,十分之一的受访者仍不会进入 "黄色区域",四分之一的受访者会将此问题留给受过专门培训的紧急医疗服务(EMS)部门处理。虽然不同工作经验、角色(主管/指导员)或附加资格(如消防、服兵役)的急救医疗人员之间很少有强烈的对比,但参与国家的急救医疗人员之间存在显著差异。最值得注意的是:(1) 平均而言,只有挪威的参与者发现了从 "安全第一 "到 "控制风险 "的明显范式转变;(2) 在奥地利,69.8%的参与者不愿意在没有警察护送的情况下进入现场,而在挪威,这一比例为 42.7%;(3) 在 "武器 "是否是在这种情况下 "有用 "的装备这一问题上,分歧尤其大(从德国的 14.3%到以色列的 58.9%不等)。尽管大多数问题都得到了绝大多数人相同的回答,但也可以看到明显的差异,特别是国与国之间的差异。我们对这些差异提出了各种解释,并讨论了在反暴力举措固有的情境规范力量下,多边部队是否能够真正保持被动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: The Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management publishes original, innovative, and timely articles describing research or practice in the fields of homeland security and emergency management. JHSEM publishes not only peer-reviewed articles, but also news and communiqués from researchers and practitioners, and book/media reviews. Content comes from a broad array of authors representing many professions, including emergency management, engineering, political science and policy, decision science, and health and medicine, as well as from emergency management and homeland security practitioners.
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