The ministry requested all hospitals to provide immediate first aid for severe
emergencies, even if their injuries are not within the hospitals’ areas of
expertise.
Only when the patients are out of critical condition should they be transferred
to other hospitals, the ministry said in a statement.
All hospitals should have a clear patient transport plan, especially for elderly
patients with acute pneumonia and suffering from sequelae of stroke, and
children with respiratory diseases, it said.
The ministry also requested health departments across the country to reinforce
the service mindset at hospitals in their areas and remind medical staff to
maintain good services for inpatients during the holiday.
Working shifts should be divided between doctors, nurses and staff at the
hospitals’ departments of emergency resuscitation and infection to ensure timely
treatment for patients, the ministry said.
“All hospitals must be open 24 hours per day and make sure they have enough
human resources, medicines, and medical equipment to handle emergencies such as
victims injured in traffic accidents, people suffering from food poisoning, or
mothers giving birth during the holiday,” it said in the statement.
Health centres and medical units should also prepare medicines, beds, and
medical equipment in case of disease outbreaks, it added.
Nguyen Quoc Anh, Director of Bach Mai Hospital in Hanoi, on January 22 asked all
doctors at the hospital to evaluate the conditions of their patients and decide
whether they should be hospitalised, with priority given to those in serious
conditions.
The doctors should inform concerned personnel of new inpatients prior to their
arrival, and of their arrival times for better bed arrangement, he added.
“Do not, under any circumstances, pass patients around or create trouble for
them and their family members,” he said.
Doctors at the hospital’s Artificial Kidney Unit will be on duty all day long
during the holiday to perform dialyses for patients with kidney failure, Anh
added.
The hospital’s leaders and doctors on February 1 will pay a visit and give
presents to the patients that will be staying over the holiday, he said. Free
meals will be provided for all inpatients and medical staff during February 4-6,
he added.
A total of 147 accidents occurred nationwide over the four-day New Year’s
holiday (December 29, 2018 – January 1, 2019), claiming 110 lives and injuring
61 people.
During Tet last year, 195 people died in traffic accidents while another 199
were injured, 2018, with alcohol being the leading cause. About 810 people were
hospitalised during that time due to alcohol poisoning.
Source: VNA