INTRODUCTION:

Mobile field hospitals are medical care systems that can be moved and are used to provide care in remote areas. They are made up of modular components and can be quickly set up. Mobile field hospitals from BLU-MED are self-contained, climate-controlled, and designed to provide a clean, safe environment for administering advanced-level medical care. 

HOW THEY WORKS:


ADVANTAGES:

DISADVANTAGES:

Logistical challenges:
Setting up and maintaining a field hospital in a combat zone can be complex, requiring transportation of medical supplies, equipment, and personnel to a potentially remote location.

PRACTICES OF MOBILE HOSPITALS IN DISASTER RESPONSE:

we collected the data from literature, websites, and scientific reports, to describe and discuss the disaster response of mobile hospitals in recent years.

As seen in terrestrial mobile hospitals were most commonly used. In the earthquake in Haiti in 2010, the United States established the first tent hospital in Prince Lane of Haiti, which consists of the first 2 tent units for simple medical rescue, and transferred to the tent hospital with operation and intensive care functions composed of 4 tent units due to demand; in 2013, the strong typhoon Haiyan swept across the central region of the Philippines, damaging infrastructure including hospitals. The medical teams sent by Israel and South Korea, under the command of Philippine authorities, assisted the damaged local hospitals and set up tent hospitals near the local hospitals according to the situation of the rescue site, China’s medical team set up a mobile hospital of inflatable tents in the mountainous area in the 2015 Nepal earthquake. Shelter hospitals played an important role in the rescue during 2 major earthquakes in China: Wenchuan and Yushu earthquakes.

Disaster Response of Mobile Hospitals in Recent Years:

In recent years, mobile hospitals have played a crucial role in disaster response by providing immediate medical care to affected populations in remote or hard-to-reach areas following natural disasters, offering flexibility in deployment, and enabling rapid treatment, particularly when existing healthcare infrastructure is damaged or overwhelmed; notable examples include their use in earthquake relief efforts, hurricane response, and refugee crises, with advancements in technology and design making them more efficient and adaptable to various situations. 

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