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Journal Article

Citation

Ripoll-Gallardo A, D'Ambrosio A, Manzoni P, Grifone V, Pedrazzi C, De Luca G, Arghetti D, Stellini A, Zambelan A, Ruggiero I, Cusmà-Piccione R, Bacullo G, Lorito F, Perbellini P, Giacovelli M, De Donno M, Pelà S, Colzani G, Brioschi E, Chiodini G, Sechi G, Zoli A, Fumagalli R, Stucchi R. Disaster Med. Public Health Prep. 2023; 17: e563.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Publisher Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/dmp.2023.198

PMID

38093634

Abstract

On July 7, 2023, at 1:21 am, a fire was declared in a retirement home in Milan, Italy. The number of casualties (n = 87) according to the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment (START) triage system was categorized as 65 green, 14 yellow, 2 red, and 6 black; 75% were women, and the mean age was 85.1 years (± 9). Most patients were unable to walk. A total of 30 basic life support (BLS) ambulances, 3 advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) teams on fast cars, 2 buses, and 1 coordination team were deployed. A scoop and run approach was adopted with patients being transported to 15 health care facilities. The event was terminated at 5:43 am. Though the local mass casualty incident (MCI) response plan was correctly applied, the evacuation of the building was difficult due to the age and comorbidities of the patients. START failed to correctly identify patients categorized as minor. Communication problems arose on site that led to the late evacuation of critical patients.


Language: en

Keywords

evacuation; mass casualty incident; nursing home fire; START triage

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