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Telecommunications in Israeli field hospitals deployed to three crisis zones
Authors:Aharon S. Finestone  Gadi Levy  Yaron Bar‐Dayan
Affiliation:1. Consultant Orthopaedist with the Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps and at the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Assaf Harofeh Medical Center, Zerifin, affiliated with the Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, , Israel;2. Head of the Medical Informatics Branch in the Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps, , Israel;3. Associate Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, , Beer Sheva, Israel
Abstract:A field hospital overseas requires various types of communication equipment. This study presents the communications equipment used by three Israeli field hospital delegations to earthquake sites at Adapazari, Turkey, in 1999, Port‐au‐Prince, Haiti, in 2010 and Minamisanriku, Japan, in 2011. The delegations to Turkey and Haiti were relatively large (105–230 personnel) and were on the site early (three to four days after each event). The 55‐person delegation to Japan arrived later and was established as an outpatient community hospital. Standard military VHF radios were the only effective tool up to 5 km, until cellular coverage was regained (1–2 weeks after each event). International communication was good. While short‐wave communication (telephone and Internet) was used in Turkey, a direct satellite channel was set up in Haiti. In Japan, BGAN Inmarsat provided efficient Wi‐Fi for all needs. Motorola walkie talkies were not efficient beyond the immediate vicinity. This paper recommends continued use of military‐specification equipment alongside newer modalities, particularly in situations where infrastructure is damaged.
Keywords:field hospital  Israel  mass casualty incident  radio equipment  telecommunications equipment
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