Dr.Ilona Denisenko,MD,MMH Dr.Ilona Denisenko graduate medicine from the Moscow Medical Academy in 1994, getting specialization in Surgery and General Medicine followed by diploma in Emergency medicine ...
... was in Otjiwarongo, Namibia, State Hospital. After passing the examinations at university I became a specialist in Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, additional trained to be emergency specialist. 2003 ...
... Psychology, Multicultural and Maritime Emergency Psychology, Ethno-Medicine Maritime activities Maritime study about work- and life situation on board, Stress and Strain, multicultural Crews, PTSD ...
Norwegian citizen, born 1945. Medical school 1963-1969 in Rostock. Full-time surgery in Norwegian hospitals 1972-2012. Board-certified general surgeon (1979) and pediatric surgeon (1992). Master of Health ...
... a specific focus on emergency medicine and trauma, working in both the public and private healthcare sectors. Ryan then moved over to the UK in 2003 where he continued with his emergency medicine training ...
... examinations on behalf of the British, Dutch, German and Norwegian flags. be able to assess the safety risk that relates to the seafarer’s medical condition in general, to his or her regular and emergency ...
... audible alarms. No medical condition, disorder or impairment that will prevent the effective and safe conduct of their routine and emergency duties onboard. In addition, they must Not suffer ...
... Medicine) is also accepted in the Netherlands. Offshore workers should be physically and mentally healthy, as access to emergency care and treatment of illness are limited. Physical demands are high ...
... provided by supply vessels bringing routine equipment, water and food, with helicopters moving personnel and emergency supplies. In some areas, such as the North Atlantic, west of the Shetland Islands, ...
... an emergency. This means that fitness to work as crew on an inland waterway vessel is concerned with task related capabilities rather than the risks of illness requiring a medical consultation developing ...
... and emergency surgery was not unusual at sea. These days most shipping companies follow the Maritime Labour Convention 2006 (MLC 2006) (7) which states that ships carrying 100 or more persons and ordinarily ...
... on these cases has been analysed, and then it is often not published. Emergency evacuations These normally have TMAS support and are recorded in studies of TMAS referrals. Self-reports of ill health ...
AB Able Bodied Seafarer ACEP American College of Emergency Physicians ACLS Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support ADA Americans with Disability Act AED Automatied ...
... form part of the ships safety management system. A death on board a ship should be treated as an emergency. Ship owners are always encouraged to urgently make contact with Telemedical Assistance Services ...
... large passenger ship with its many decks and stairways. In an emergency, when the ship is possibly listing to one side, orientation becomes even more difficult, when formerly horizontal passageways suddenly ...
... occur. When accidents happen at sea there is no guarantee that emergency responders will arrive promptly. Depending on the location of the incident and the weather prevailing at the time, it may be a ...
... of microcephaly and other neurologic disorders reported in Brazil to be a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. They were caused by the Zika virus, transmitted primarily by the Aedes mosquitoes, ...
... Haemorrhagic fevers, e.g. Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) On 8 August 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa a Public Health Emergency of International ...
... ships at sea to US emergency medicine physicians for advice, 48% of cases were medical, 14% were injuries and 2% were purely psychiatric. 15% of the medical cases were due to respiratory infections (7). ...