Flood, disaster, and turmoil: Social issues in cleft and craniofacial care and crisis relief

2011 
Objective: To examine social issues in the conduct of cleft and craniofacial care through relief programs in disrupted crisis contexts. Method: Social, health policy, and ethical analyses. Results: At best, craniofacial team care is multidisciplinary, coordinated, and sustained, requiring a long-term relationship between team members, patients, and families. Disasters and societal turmoil interrupt such relationships, causing craniofacial care to become a secondary concern. Providing craniofacial team care in a crisis setting requires rebuilding disrupted coordination and communication. Crisis relief care involves a complex set of expectations and responsibilities and raises issues such as (1) quality assurance, infection control, appropriate standards of care, and follow-up care/continuity; (2) equity of access to services and clinical ethics in the context of war and/or deprivation; (3) training of visitors in the local nation or site; (4) disciplinary composition of teams, interprofessional communicati...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    3
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []