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Emergency Care Needs to Be Prioritised

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Health

Source: TH

Context: The recent stampede in Karur, Tamil Nadu, highlighted gaps in India’s emergency response system, sparking renewed calls to treat emergency medical care not merely as a service, but as a constitutional duty ensuring every citizen’s right to life.

About Emergency Care Needs to Be Prioritised:

Evolution of Emergency Care:

• Modern emergency medicine evolved from wartime trauma management during the World Wars, where organised triage and rapid evacuation became critical.

• The industrial revolution and advances in trauma and cardiovascular medicine led to structured ambulance systems with life-support capability.

• Over time, the focus expanded from mere transport to on-site stabilisation, giving rise to paramedic-led and doctor-led mobile emergency units.

• India’s 108 Emergency Response System, introduced under the National Health Mission (NHM), institutionalised public access to emergency transport.

• The concept evolved globally into the “Golden Hour” and later the “Platinum Ten Minutes”, emphasising response speed as a determinant of survival.

Constitutional Imperative:

• The Right to Life under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution inherently guarantees access to timely emergency medical care.

• The State is ethically bound to ensure unobstructed emergency access during mass gatherings and disasters.

Science of Timely Intervention:

Acute illnesses and trauma cause rapid circulatory collapse; immediate diagnosis and treatment can reverse these life-threatening disturbances.

• The Golden Hour represents the crucial 60 minutes post-injury when intervention can prevent irreversible organ damage.

• The evolved “Platinum Ten Minutes” standard stresses that medical help—not just transport—should reach the victim within 10 minutes.

• Modern ambulances act as mobile ICUs, equipped with oxygen supply, defibrillators, ECG, airway management tools, and telemedicine links.

• Timely, skilled intervention transforms outcomes, reducing preventable deaths from strokes, heart attacks, and trauma.

Existing Initiatives:

• The 108 Ambulance Service, a public-private partnership, operates over 10,000 ambulances, serving 7–9 million patients annually.

• Tamil Nadu leads with an average response time of 10 minutes 14 seconds, close to the Platinum Ten benchmark.

• The National Ambulance Code (AIS-125) sets standards for design, safety, and equipment across vehicle categories.

• The Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019, mandates right of way for ambulances and penalises obstruction.

NHM support enables State-level flexibility in managing emergency systems and training first responders.

Challenges in Emergency Systems:

Fragmented services: Wide disparities exist between States and private providers, leading to uneven quality.

Skill shortage: Lack of certified emergency medical technicians and high attrition rates weaken continuity.

Infrastructure gaps: Many ambulances lack advanced life support systems and telemedicine integration.

Poor coordination: Weak linkages between call centres, hospitals, and ambulance teams delay response.

Accountability vacuum: Absence of a National Emergency Regulatory Authority results in inconsistent standards and oversight.

Policy Reforms and Recommendations:

Constitute a National Emergency Services Regulatory Authority to standardise training, operations, and equipment across States.

Integrate technology through AI-based dispatch systems, GPS tracking, and real-time data sharing with hospitals.

Introduce national certification and pay parity for paramedics to improve retention and professionalism.

Expand air and drone ambulances for remote access and organ transport logistics.

Mandate emergency access protocols for public gatherings and urban infrastructure planning.

Promote PPP models for integrated emergency networks linking urban and rural areas.

Conclusion:

A nation capable of robotic surgeries and organ transplants must not lose lives to delayed ambulances or disorganised response systems. Emergency medical care must evolve from fragmented services into a right-based, standardised national mission. Recognising it as a constitutional and moral duty is essential to ensure that every citizen receives help when every second counts.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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