LFR International

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LFR International
LFR International logo short.png
Founders
Founded atLos Angeles, California
TypeNonprofit
Non-governmental organization
83-3568251
Legal status501(c)(3)
HeadquartersMakeni, Sierra Leone
Region
Sub-Saharan Africa
FieldsEmergency medical services development in LMICs
Volunteers
5,173 LFRs
Award(s)Prince Michael International Road Safety Award
Websitewww.lfrinternational.org

LFR International is an American international nonprofit organization focused on prehospital emergency medical research and emergency medical services development in sub-Saharan Africa. LFR launches sustainable prehospital emergency care programs in resource-limited settings of low-income countries without formal emergency medical services by collaborating with local governments and stakeholders to train lay first responders.[1]

History[]

More than 5,000 pre-existing transportation providers have been trained as lay first responders by LFR since 2016 to care for road traffic injuries and affordably scale up prehospital emergency care in resource-limited African settings.[2][3]

LFR's model of locally-informed rapid emergency care deployment has been launched and studied by researchers in Uganda, Chad, Guatemala, and Sierra Leone.[1][4][5][6] LFR was a founding organization of the First Responder Coalition of Sierra Leone in 2019 to expand prehospital emergency care and develop emergency medical services in Sierra Leone.[7][8][9] LFR launched trainings with the Coalition in Makeni.[10]

Locations[]

Uganda[]

In 2016, Delaney launched an early iteration of what would eventually become the LFR model with the Uganda Red Cross Society in Iganga, Uganda.[11] A lay first responder program of 154 motorcycle taxi responders was created to explore its capacity to provide prehospital emergency care for victims of road traffic injury in a municipality of 100,000 people.[4] Encountering nearly 10% mortality, first responders assisted 250 victims in the first few months (83% of which were road traffic injury-related) and utilized bleeding control skills in over half of encounters.[4]

Three years later in 2019, LFR investigators explored the social and financial implications of first responder trainings for initial participants. Though the World Health Organization had recommended training laypeople as the first step toward developing formal emergency medical services since 2004, there had previously been no investigations of the effects of trainings for laypeople. As the first to do so, LFR researchers found 75% of initial participants continued to voluntarily participate and described various apparent benefits to training, namely in an increase in social stature and income, in Emergency Medicine Journal.[3]

Chad[]

In 2018, LFR collaborated with trainers from the Red Cross of Chad to develop a lay first responder program in Am Timan, located in the rural Salamat Region, which had previously claimed the title of “poorest region” globally as measured by a multidimensional poverty index by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.[12] Under extreme resource limitations, an LFR program was launched by training 108 motorcycle taxi drivers to provide care for 36,000 people. Curriculum efficacy was evaluated using pre- and post-course tests, which demonstrated significant knowledge acquisition in participants.[5]

In 2019, during follow-up interviews with initial participants after 12 months of providing emergency care, trainees reported sustained voluntary participation due the ability to care for the injured, new knowledge/skills, and the resultant gain in social stature and customer acquisition. Findings suggested LFR programs appear feasible and cost-effective in rural, resource-limited sub-Saharan African settings.[5]

Guatemala[]

LFR International prehospital trauma management training of DIFEP (Division of Special Police Forces) in Chimaltenango, Guatemala in 2019
LFR International prehospital trauma management training of PNC (Policia Nacional Civil) in Sacatepéquez, Guatemala in 2019.
Prehospital trauma management training with DIFEP (Division of Special Police Forces) and PNC (Policia Nacional Civil) in Guatemala, 2019

In 2019, LFR deployed to Guatemala to investigate the development of first responder programs in a middle-income, Central American setting. LFR worked with affiliates of the Guatemalan Ministry of the Interior to train hundreds of members of the Policia Nacional Civil and CVB across the Escuintla, Sacatepéquez, and Chimaltenango departments in prehospital trauma management.[13] A study conducted alongside the trainings found a single-day, five-hour training course effectively trained participants to provide effective prehospital emergency care.[1]

Sierra Leone[]

In 2019, LFR was a co-founding member of the First Responder Coalition of Sierra Leone (FRCSL) with the Sierra Leone Red Cross Society, , the Holy Spirit Hospital of Makeni, and the University of Makeni, its national partners.[14] With the launch of the coalition, the FRCSL committed to training more than 1,000 community members in Makeni as LFRs.[15] Between July and December 2019, 4,529 LFRs were trained by local LFR instructors. LFRs were later found to have treated 1,850 patients over the following six months, demonstrating significant emergency care knowledge improvement and retention in LFR participants.[16]

Over a 14-month period, impact was assessed using the Prehospital Emergency Trauma Care Assessment Tool (PETCAT), a novel survey instrument LFR designed and administered to first-line hospital-based healthcare providers, to independently assess the frequency and quality of prehospital intervention by LFRs.[17] Change in emergency care was controlled for by using a difference-in-differences approach and comparing change in Makeni, where the intervention had been launched, to Kenema, a control city 125 miles away without an LFR program. While controlling for secular trends, prehospital care in Makeni was demonstrated to have improved significantly over the 14-month study period, while also validating PETCAT as a robust tool for independent EMS quality assessment in resource-limited settings.[17]

Honors[]

In 2020, LFR was awarded the Prince Michael International Road Safety Award by Prince Michael of Kent in recognition of "exemplary achievement and innovation" in improving road safety and post-crash response globally.[18][19][20][21][22]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Delaney, Peter G.; Figueroa, Jose A.; Eisner, Zachary J.; Andrade, Rudy Erik Hernandez; Karmakar, Monita; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (2020-04-01). "Designing and implementing a practical prehospital emergency trauma care curriculum for lay first responders in Guatemala". Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open. 5 (1): e000409. doi:10.1136/tsaco-2019-000409. ISSN 2397-5776. PMC 7254122.
  2. ^ "Student project aims to bolster first responder services in Africa | GlobalReach | Michigan Medicine". GlobalReach. 2020-02-13. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  3. ^ a b Delaney, Peter G.; Eisner, Zachary J.; Blackwell, T. Scott; Ssekalo, Ibrahim; Kazungu, Rauben; Lee, Yang Jae; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (2020-10-30). "Exploring the factors motivating continued Lay First Responder participation in Uganda: a mixed-methods, 3-year follow-up". Emergency Medicine Journal. doi:10.1136/emermed-2020-210076. ISSN 1472-0205. PMID 33127741.
  4. ^ a b c Delaney, Peter G.; Bamuleke, Richard; Lee, Yang Jae (2018-08-01). "Lay First Responder Training in Eastern Uganda: Leveraging Transportation Infrastructure to Build an Effective Prehospital Emergency Care Training Program". World Journal of Surgery. 42 (8): 2293–2302. doi:10.1007/s00268-018-4467-3. ISSN 1432-2323.
  5. ^ a b c Hancock, Canaan J.; Delaney, Peter G.; Eisner, Zachary J.; Kroner, Eric; Mahamet-Nuur, Issa; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (October 2020). "Developing a Lay First Responder Program in Chad: A 12-Month Follow-Up Evaluation of a Rural Prehospital Emergency Care Program". Prehospital and Disaster Medicine. 35 (5): 546–553. doi:10.1017/S1049023X20000977. ISSN 1049-023X.
  6. ^ Eisner, Zachary J.; Delaney, Peter G.; Thullah, Alfred H.; Yu, Amanda J.; Timbo, Sallieu B.; Koroma, Sylvester; Sandy, Kpawuru; Sesay, Abdulai Daniel; Turay, Patrick; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (2020-11-01). "Evaluation of a Lay First Responder Program in Sierra Leone as a Scalable Model for Prehospital Trauma Care". Injury. 51 (11): 2565–2573. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2020.09.001. ISSN 0020-1383.
  7. ^ Thomas, Abdul Rashid (2019-07-05). "Sierra Leone's road accident First Responder Coalition to save thousands of lives". SIERRA LEONE TELEGRAPH. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  8. ^ Vanguard, The Patriotic (2019-07-04). "Makeni: Coalition of First Responders formed". The Patriotic Vanguard. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  9. ^ admin. "LFR International Trains Responders and Creates the 'First Responder Coalition of Sierra Leone | AYV Newspaper News -Sierra Leone News, AYV Sierra Leone, Wake Up Sierra Leone, AYV News, Sierra Leone News, Leone News". Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  10. ^ admin. ""LFR International brings its innovative lay first responder training program to Makeni" | AYV Newspaper News -Sierra Leone News, AYV Sierra Leone, Wake Up Sierra Leone, AYV News, Sierra Leone News, Leone News". Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  11. ^ "An innovation mindset | The Source | Washington University in St. Louis". The Source. 2018-04-20. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  12. ^ World Bank. Global Monitoring Report 2007 (Overview): Confronting the Challenges of Gender Equality and Fragile States. Washington, DC USA: The World Bank; 2007.
  13. ^ LFR International in Guatemala, retrieved 2021-05-22
  14. ^ Vanguard, The Patriotic (2019-07-04). "Makeni: Coalition of First Responders formed". The Patriotic Vanguard. Retrieved 2021-07-16.
  15. ^ Thomas, Abdul Rashid (2019-07-05). "Sierra Leone's road accident First Responder Coalition to save thousands of lives". SIERRA LEONE TELEGRAPH. Retrieved 2021-07-16.
  16. ^ Eisner, Zachary J.; Delaney, Peter G.; Thullah, Alfred H.; Yu, Amanda J.; Timbo, Sallieu B.; Koroma, Sylvester; Sandy, Kpawuru; Sesay, Abdulai Daniel; Turay, Patrick; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (2020-11-01). "Evaluation of a Lay First Responder Program in Sierra Leone as a Scalable Model for Prehospital Trauma Care". Injury. 51 (11): 2565–2573. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2020.09.001. ISSN 0020-1383. PMID 32917385.
  17. ^ a b Delaney, Peter G.; Eisner, Zachary J.; Thullah, Alfred H.; Muller, Benjamin D.; Sandy, Kpawuru; Boonstra, Philip S.; Scott, John W.; Raghavendran, Krishnan (2021-08-01). "Evaluating a Novel Prehospital Emergency Trauma Care Assessment Tool (PETCAT) for Low- and Middle-Income Countries in Sierra Leone". World Journal of Surgery. 45 (8): 2370–2377. doi:10.1007/s00268-021-06140-1. ISSN 1432-2323.
  18. ^ "Student, alum win prestigious road safety award | The Source | Washington University in St. Louis". The Source. 2020-12-11. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  19. ^ "RoadSafe: Lay First Responder International receives Royal Award for Post-Crash Response Innitiative [sic]". www.roadsafe.com. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  20. ^ "Road Safety Awards: Lay First Responder International receives Royal Award for Post-Crash Response Innitiative". www.roadsafetyawards.com. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  21. ^ "Student-led NGO that trains lay first responders garners road safety award from British crown | GlobalReach | Michigan Medicine". GlobalReach. 2020-12-15. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  22. ^ "Student-led nonprofit wins international road safety prize". engineering.wustl.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
Retrieved from ""