12.07.2015 Views

India and the Management of Road Crashes ... - Alfred Hospital

India and the Management of Road Crashes ... - Alfred Hospital

India and the Management of Road Crashes ... - Alfred Hospital

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

A statutory authority, or equivalent, would administer <strong>the</strong> scheme whichwould fund <strong>the</strong> costs <strong>of</strong> initial medical care on a no-fault principle. A no-faultscheme guarantees payment for care from <strong>the</strong> statutory authority irrespective<strong>of</strong> who is at fault <strong>and</strong> encourages immediate hospital care <strong>and</strong> surgicalintervention for those who require it. For example, in Kerala <strong>the</strong>re are anestimated 50,000 injured in accidents each year, at a health care cost <strong>of</strong> Rs80,00,00,000 or US$ 20,000,000 per annum [5] . In 2003 <strong>the</strong>re were 2,500,000registered vehicles in Kerala, implying an average Rs 450 per annum pervehicle surcharge (US $10) which would <strong>the</strong>n be pooled to cover <strong>the</strong> scheme.Administrative costs need to be determined <strong>and</strong> a formal scoping study wouldneed to be undertaken to accurately determine <strong>the</strong> costs associated withcollection, infrastructure funding <strong>and</strong> medical <strong>and</strong> hospital care.Therefore <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> State-based, no fault insurance schemeslinked to current State health, police <strong>and</strong> road tax collection systems thatcurrently exist in <strong>India</strong> is recommended. These will have <strong>the</strong> capacity toreduce mortality rates <strong>and</strong> improve outcomes - <strong>and</strong> will be propelled by astrong economic incentive to reduce <strong>the</strong> Insurers’ outgoing expenses byreducing <strong>the</strong> incidence <strong>of</strong> road trauma. The additional income <strong>the</strong>n receivedwill be appropriately spent on developing <strong>the</strong> medical <strong>and</strong> policinginfrastructure required.ResearchThere has been significant research in trauma over <strong>the</strong> last 20 years.Although many issues are universal, some findings are more relevant to <strong>the</strong>demography from which <strong>the</strong>y are derived. This is demonstrated, for example,by <strong>the</strong> differences in <strong>the</strong> delivery <strong>of</strong> rural trauma care to <strong>the</strong> care delivered indensely populated urban environments - or <strong>the</strong> differences in systems dealingwith largely penetrating trauma compared to those systems that deal withpredominantly blunt trauma. Each <strong>India</strong>n State will need to mould <strong>the</strong>previously described generic principles to <strong>the</strong>ir own demographic.Clinical research is commonly produced by practitioners in <strong>the</strong> particularfield. Funding which fosters career development in <strong>the</strong> care <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> injured willhave a lasting benefit by generating systems improvement through research.Conclusion<strong>Road</strong> trauma in <strong>India</strong> is a significant societal burden which requires urgentattention. The death rate would be reduced with better organised systems <strong>of</strong>trauma care. A reduction <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> road toll is dependent on State authoritiesintroducing systems that fund accident prevention <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> organised care <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> injured.Emergency <strong>and</strong> trauma care should not be considered a luxury for richcountries or rich individuals in poor countries [33] . The goal <strong>of</strong> an effective11

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!