Stanford doctors train paramedics to combat big void
KATHMANDU, Nepal — When Subhash Dhungel’s father passed out, the panicked road engineer called for an ambulance. To the Nepalese man’s horror, the vehicle arrived without a trained medical technician to help his unconscious father as they drove to a Kathmandu hospital.
It wasn’t an isolated case. Nepal is woefully short of ambulances and trained emergency medical technicians are even rarer. Ambulances are mainly used as a means to simply transport patients to hospitals.
Now a group of doctors from Stanford University have trained four dozen EMTs in the hope that they can gradually transform the Himalayan nation’s emergency services.
The team trained 48 EMTs for 12 weeks from December to February. The last such training they did in Nepal was in 2011.
“It is helpful to have people get to the hospital quickly, but there is no difference between the ambulance and a taxi if the person is not really trained to use equipment to save lives on the way,” said Rebecca Walker, a Stanford University emergency medicine professor and team leader.
The trainees learned about providing first aid, treating trauma and heart patients and even delivering babies.
“There is little or no public awareness about EMTs in Nepal and ambulances in Nepal generally do not have oxygen bottles, back boards or any trained EMTs,” said Binod Thapa, a critical care manager who underwent the training.
Only three private hospitals and one nonprofit group, the Nepal Ambulance Service, in the nation of 26.4 million people have ambulances with EMTs on board.
The Capital, Kathmandu, is routinely gridlocked in huge traffic jams and mountains make up for the most of the country’s terrain, so it takes a long time for ambulances to reach hospitals. A lack of trained staff on board to perform emergency life-saving procedures greatly decreases patients’ chances of survival.