TY - JOUR
T1 - Real-time Innovative Solutions for Ensuring Continuity and Safety of Medical Care in a Hospital Under Wartime Physical Threat
AU - Bar-On, Elhanan
AU - Shapira, Shachar
AU - Barkai, Galia
AU - Halpern, Naama
AU - Mazaki-Tovi, Shali
AU - Har-Even, Yoel
AU - Vivante, Asaf
AU - Grinberg, Amir
AU - Frenkel Nir, Yael
AU - Semo-Oz, Rotem
AU - Luttinger, Assaf
AU - Loebenstein, Roni
AU - Manor, Uri
AU - Bitan, Ohad
AU - Kreiss, Yitshak
AU - Pessach, Itai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Inc.
PY - 2025/11/28
Y1 - 2025/11/28
N2 - The recent conflict in the Middle East posed unprecedented threats, with hundreds of long-range ballistic missiles launched toward Israel, targeting military and civilian facilities including hospitals. Organizational and logistic actions were taken in Sheba Medical Center, both pre-emptively and during the conflict, preparing for a mass casualty incident while maintaining routine medical care to the population and maintaining safety of patients and staff. These included discharging patients and increasing home hospitalizations, ward evacuations, transferring patients to protected areas, and classifying patients by their vulnerability and status of protection, accelerated structural adaptation of underground spaces to house patients, and construction of a tented field hospital underground. An effective command and control system was in place to monitor protective status, and an ethical committee was convened to assist in decision-making. These measures enabled continued delivery of emergency and medical care under fire while ensuring the safety of patients and staff.
AB - The recent conflict in the Middle East posed unprecedented threats, with hundreds of long-range ballistic missiles launched toward Israel, targeting military and civilian facilities including hospitals. Organizational and logistic actions were taken in Sheba Medical Center, both pre-emptively and during the conflict, preparing for a mass casualty incident while maintaining routine medical care to the population and maintaining safety of patients and staff. These included discharging patients and increasing home hospitalizations, ward evacuations, transferring patients to protected areas, and classifying patients by their vulnerability and status of protection, accelerated structural adaptation of underground spaces to house patients, and construction of a tented field hospital underground. An effective command and control system was in place to monitor protective status, and an ethical committee was convened to assist in decision-making. These measures enabled continued delivery of emergency and medical care under fire while ensuring the safety of patients and staff.
KW - field hospital
KW - missile
KW - protection
KW - underground hospital
KW - war
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023232147
U2 - 10.1017/dmp.2025.10263
DO - 10.1017/dmp.2025.10263
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C2 - 41310931
AN - SCOPUS:105023232147
SN - 1935-7893
VL - 19
JO - Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness
JF - Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness
M1 - e332
ER -