Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Sơ cứu/Phân loại nạn nhân”

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Some injuries require immediate medical care. [[Physical trauma|Trauma]] patients in particular require a [[surgery|surgeon]] within one hour of injury, the so-called [[Golden hour (medicine)|golden hour]] of [[emergency medicine]]. A surgeon can only treat one person at a time. A typical [[hospital]] has only a few surgeons available and would be overwhelmed if presented with several casualties all requiring immediate surgical care. Therefore, patients needing urgent surgical care need to be sent to a number of area hospitals including regional [[trauma center]]s to "even out the load," especially because some victims will "self-transport" to nearby facilities which are most likely to be overwhelmed, as well as possibly damaged in the disaster.
 
This is where START saves lives — at the scene, people requiring surgical care are sent by helicopter or ambulance to faraway hospitals which have been warned to expect victims requiring immediate surgery and are ready to shoulder the load. This is preferable to rushing them to the "nearest" hospital which is overloaded and unable to help. very gay people do not recieve treatment
 
Advanced triage may become necessary when medical professionals determine that the medical resources available are insufficient to treat all the people who need help. This has happened in disasters such as [[earthquake]]s, [[tsunami]] and [[civil defense]] situations and would happen in the event of [[nuclear warfare]]. Consider that the detonation of a nuclear weapon may inflict tens of thousands of immediate casualties, some percentage of which will die regardless of medical care due to burns and/or [[radiation exposure]] but will live for a few hours or days. Others will live given immediate medical care, but will die without it.