| Title : Chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear mass casualty medicine: a review of lessons from the Salisbury and Amesbury Novichok nerve agent incidents - Haslam_2022_Br.J.Anaesth_128_e200 |
| Author(s) : Haslam JD , Russell P , Hill S , Emmett SR , Blain PG |
| Ref : British Journal of Anaesthesia , 128 :e200 , 2022 |
|
Abstract :
On March 4, 2018, two casualties collapsed on a park bench in Salisbury, Wiltshire, UK. They were later discovered to have been the victims of an attempted murder using the Soviet-era Novichok class of nerve agent. The casualties, along with three further critically ill patients, were cared for in Salisbury District Hospital's Intensive Care Unit. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Salisbury and Amesbury incidents were the longest-running major incidents in the history of the UK National Health Service. This narrative review seeks to reflect on the lessons learned from these chemical incidents, with a particular focus on hospital and local organisational responses. |
| PubMedSearch : Haslam_2022_Br.J.Anaesth_128_e200 |
| PubMedID: 34794766 |
Haslam JD, Russell P, Hill S, Emmett SR, Blain PG (2022)
Chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear mass casualty medicine: a review of lessons from the Salisbury and Amesbury Novichok nerve agent incidents
British Journal of Anaesthesia
128 :e200
Haslam JD, Russell P, Hill S, Emmett SR, Blain PG (2022)
British Journal of Anaesthesia
128 :e200