
Emergency care meet for docs begins
Following instructions of principal health secretary Partha Sarthi Sen Sharma, the workshop is being conducted by EMRI Green Health Services, which runs the 108 and 102 ambulance services in UP. The training module has been created by EMRI and Stanford School of Medicine, USA. Dr. Kavita Arya, director of Balrampur Hospital, inaugurated the workshop.
Doctors are being trained in emergency care during the critical "golden hour"—the time period of first medical intervention before patients are referred to bigger hospitals.
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Time of India
a day ago
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Lucknow: Doctors must stay updated on emergency management as critical situations can arise anywhere. The advice was given by chief medical officer Dr NB Singh while addressing the closing ceremony of the four-day 'District Hospital Physician Training' emergency management workshop at Balrampur Hospital on Sunday. Organised by EMRI Green Health Services, provider of UP's 108 and 102 ambulance services, the workshop trained 26 doctors from various govt hospitals across Lucknow. Singh said patients expect help from doctors during emergencies, regardless of specialisation. The training aimed to strengthen treatment capabilities for trauma, cardiac arrest, and poisoning. Dr Daud Husami from EMRI's Emergency Medicine Learning Centre shared that participants were trained in trauma management. tnn


Time of India
4 days ago
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Emergency care meet for docs begins
Lucknow: To improve emergency care in govt hospitals, a four-day training workshop, District Hospital Physician Training (DHPT), began in Lucknow on Thursday with participation of 26 doctors from different hospitals. Following instructions of principal health secretary Partha Sarthi Sen Sharma, the workshop is being conducted by EMRI Green Health Services, which runs the 108 and 102 ambulance services in UP. The training module has been created by EMRI and Stanford School of Medicine, USA. Dr. Kavita Arya, director of Balrampur Hospital, inaugurated the workshop. Doctors are being trained in emergency care during the critical "golden hour"—the time period of first medical intervention before patients are referred to bigger hospitals. TNN


Hindustan Times
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