Final ECSA NEPAL REPORT 2021
Final ECSA NEPAL REPORT 2021
Final ECSA NEPAL REPORT 2021
REPORT ON
EMERGENCY CARE SYSTEM ASSESSMENT AND
CONSENSUS BASED ACTION PRIORITIES: NEPAL
Government of Nepal
Ministry of Health and Population
2021
2
Report on Emergency Care System Assessment and
Consensus-based Action Priorities: Nepal
Contributors
The following individuals contributed significantly to the emergency care system assess-
ment and participated in the workshop (designations indicated were during assessment):
Prof. Dr. Pradeep Vaidya, Surgeon, Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital (TUTH), Insti-
tute of Medicine (IOM)
Dr. Ramesh Kumar Maharjan, Associate Prof., TUTH, IOM
WHO Headquarters:
Dr. Teri Reynolds, Unit Head, Clinical Services and System (CSY), Integrated Health Ser-
vices (IHS), UHC/Life course (UHL) - WHO Geneva
Dr. Priyanka Relan, Technical Officer, CSY/UHS/UHL - WHO Geneva
Acknowledgement
Dr. Harveen Bergquist, Consultant, CSY/IHS/UHL, WHO, Geneva for ECSA planning, com-
piling response data and preparing meeting materials
Dr. Gemma Rutter, Consultant, WHE Programme, WCO - Nepal for editing the Report
I
Government of Nepal
Ministry of Health and Population
Message
It is my pleasure to release the findings of assessment of the emergency
care system of Nepal. Emergency, trauma and acute care services are
essential part of the health system and of Universal Health Coverage.
The assessment has identified priority strategic areas for actions to
strengthen the emergency care systems and services in Nepal. The inte-
grated approach recommended in the report will enable health facilities
and the health care providers to manage children and adults with medi-
cal, surgical and obstetric emergencies, including injuries and infections,
heart attacks and strokes, asthma and acute complications of pregnan-
cy. This will ultimately help to realize the provision in the Constitution of
Nepal which states that every citizen shall have the right to free basic
health services and that no one shall be deprived of emergency health
services.
I call upon the concerned divisions and departments to develop a
roadmap to implement the priorities identified in the assessment.
Finally, I would like to thank Health Emergency and Disaster Manage-
ment Unit, Health Emergency Operation Center and the World Health
Organization for undertaking this assessment.
II
Foreword
Emergency Care System (ECS) is the first point of contact with the health system for
many, particularly in areas where there are access barriers to care. With sound plan-
ning and organization, emergency care systems have the potential to address over
half of deaths in low- and middle-income countries. Acute illnesses, injuries, and com-
plications of pregnancy that increase the chance of mortality which have enormous
health and economic impact in Nepal can be addressed by strengthening the Emer-
gency Care System.
The Seventy-second World Health Assembly (WHA 72.16) recognized that many prov-
en health interventions are time dependent and that an integrated Emergency Care
System (ECS) provides an effective platform for the delivery of accessible, quality and
time-sensitive healthcare for acute illness and injury throughout the life-course. It
acknowledged Sustainable Development Goal 3 “ensuring healthy lives and promote
well-being for all at all ages” and recognized that well-organized safe and high-
quality Emergency Care Systems in target countries have the potential to contribute
significantly to SDG-3.
The ECS Assessment at national level was conducted during October-November 2019
with support of WHO. Based on the findings of the assessment and the action priori-
ties identified by stakeholders through a consultative process, a road map for ECS
development and strengthening in Nepal was envisioned. WHO would like to support
the implementation of key proven low-cost interventions and tools that address
some of the critical action priorities identified at the emergency rooms of major hos-
pitals across the country.
The next step is to implement the Phase 1 of the WHO-Government of Nepal (GoN)
ECS Strengthening Project at the largest emergency rooms of hospitals at each of the
seven provinces. The interventions would contribute significantly to reduce the death
rates of patients seeking emergency care and establish a functioning data collection
system in the critical facilities.
Preface
Several health interventions for acute illnesses and injury across the life course are time-dependent
requiring emergency care. These emergency care services delivered in routine times is equally im-
portant to prepare us to handle the unique demands of mass casualty or the disaster situation.
It is the responsibility bestowed upon us from our constitution to create policies to ensure universal
access to safe, quality, emergency care for all within a broader health system that provides quality es-
sential care and services and financial risk protection as part of universal health coverage. In order to
bring this constitutional aspiration, we have undertaken an assessment of emergency care systems and
services in Nepal using the WHO Emergency Care Systems Assessment (ECSA) tool. I am pleased to
disseminate the report of this assessment.
As per the WHO ECSA tool, the five domains of the emergency care systems were assessed: System
Organization, Governance and Finance; Emergency Care Data and Quality Improvement; Scene Care,
Transport and Transfer; Facility-Based Care and Emergency Preparedness and Security. Under each
domain, the detailed key issues and action priorities have been identified. In total, thirty-nine action
priorities to strengthen Nepal’s emergency care have been identified based on a consensus form wide
range of stakeholder including service providers, facility managers, program managers, academicians
or policy makers.
Moving forward, we have initiated the process of gradually implementing the action priorities in a sys-
tematic manner considering the emergency care needs of the routine times and the disaster. Accord-
ingly, we have initiated actions to systematize the prehospital care systems in Nepal including ambu-
lance service. And, we are implementing a set of high impact, low cost feasible interventions recom-
mended by WHO in strategic hospitals in all provinces. Based on the implementation experience, we
have a plan to scale this initiative in other health facilities.
I express my sincere gratitude to the Secretary for his guidance throughout the process. In addition, I
acknowledge the support of WHO Country Office for Nepal and WHO Headquarters to undertake this
assessment. Lastly, I thank all the participants for their feedback and colleagues at HEOC for the hard
work.
IV
Prologue
Nepal is among the top 20 disaster-prone countries in the world due to its rugged topography, ecological diversity,
seismic terrain and several flood-prone rivers it is vulnerable to a variety of multi-hazard disasters. Added to these fac-
tors are the risk from various infectious hazards and envenomation; man-made hazards such as fires, road traffic acci-
dents and occupational injuries; intentional and accidental poisoning; life threatening medical emergencies due to the
increasing burden of life-style diseases; and obstetric, neonatal and surgical emergencies due to lack of access to quality
clinical care.
Given the acknowledged multi-hazards profile of the country and its high adverse impact on health, emergency prepar-
edness and response readiness in the health sector has long been a priority in Nepal. Learning from the experiences of
past disasters, significant developments have occurred in emergency health care both for post-disaster / public health
emergency surge response and management of day-to-day health emergencies. Consequently, Nepal has been striving
for wholistic development of the entire emergency care system consisting of prehospital, hospital and post-hospital /
rehabilitative services.
The government’s continued commitment to strengthening the delivery of emergency care is reflected in its initiatives in
endorsing a basic health services package that includes critical emergency interventions and the development of an
emergency health services package. Nevertheless, there are still a range of opportunities for improvement in emergen-
cy care, including better coordination for continuity of care, standardizing emergency care management processes and
implementing data management systems harmonized across the emergency care pathway.
To come to grips with the current status of the national emergency care system, the MoHP along with WHO conducted
an assessment in 2019 using the WHO Emergency Care Systems Assessment (ECSA) tool which is designed for systematic
assessment of the essential components of a country’s emergency care system. The main goal of the ECSA was to iden-
tify country specific action priorities for high impact improvements of emergency care system processes and outcomes.
Based on an extensive survey of a wide range of stakeholders using the country contextualized WHO ECS tool followed
by a stakeholders consultation workshop to discuss and deliberate on the results of the survey, 39 action priorities were
identified by consensus to strengthen the national emergency health emergency system. This report outlines the pro-
cess, the outcomes and the prioritized recommendations across key domain of the emergency care system that would
address both day-to-day health emergencies and post-disaster emergency care needs.
On behalf of the WHE Programme team and colleagues from the Clinical Services and Systems Unit of WHO, Geneva - I
would like thank the leadership of the HEOC/HEDMU of the MoHP for the opportunity provided to WHO to partner in the
joint national ECS Assessment and the continuing collaboration to strengthen the national ECS. The WHE programme
especially and the entire WHO Country Office for Nepal looks forward to the successful implementation of the first phase
of the WHO – Government of Nepal ECS Strengthening Project, the inception of which we are also marking along with
the release of the ECSA report.
V
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
VI
LIST OF FIGURES X
ACRONYMS XII
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1
VII
3.4. Facility-based care 28
Action Priorities 30
4 Next steps 35
REFERENCES 37
ANNEX
LIST OF MEMBERS OF TECHNICAL COORDINATION AND DATA
COLLECTION TEAMS - ECSA - NEPAL 39
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS IN THE ECSA - NEPAL STAKEHOLDERS
CONSULTATION 40
SCHEDULE OF THE STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION ON
ECSA - NEPAL 46
VIII
LIST OF FIGURES
IX
FIGURES
WORKSHOP 14
X
ACRONYMS
XI
ECS : Emergency care systems
EU : Emergency Unit
QI : Quality Improvement
XII
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
XIII
Executive summary
Emergency care systems address a wide range of common
medical, surgical, and obstetric conditions, including injury,
complications of pregnancy, exacerbations of non-
communicable diseases (e.g. asthma, heart attacks,
strokes), and acute infections (e.g. sepsis, malaria). With
sound planning and organization, emergency care systems
have the potential to address nearly half of deaths and
more than a third of disability in low- and middle-income
countries.
1
• Ministry of Health and • Health policy makers
Population
• Representatives of interna-
• Provincial Health Direc- tional and national level
torates and Provincial Health non-governmental organi-
Training Center, Ministry of zations – Nepal Red Cross
Social Development Society, Nepal Medics, Ne-
pal Disaster and Emergen-
• Experts in emergency care
cy Medicine Center, United
• Agencies of health emergen- Mission to Nepal and Ne-
cy service providers and pal Ambulance Service
enablers
• Emergency Medical Service
Researchers and Professors
2
LIST OF PRIORITIZED
ACTIONS ACROSS
ECS DOMAINS
3
LIST OF PRIORITIZED ACTIONS ACROSS ECS DOMAINS
4
Domain Prioritized Action
Scene Care, 10 Develop prehospital care protocols and supportive
Transport and supervision systems
Transfer
Scene Care, 11 Advocate to Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and
Transport and Transport for revision of existing national traffic
Transfer laws for ambulances and lights/sirens for civilian
vehicles, and incorporate into the National Ambu-
lance Operation Guidelines
Facility-Based Care 12 Incorporate emergency care elements into existing
hospital accreditation and quality standards
5
Domain Prioritized Action
Emergency 20 Establish facility-level security and safety protocols at
Preparedness each emergency unit to protect staff and infrastructure
and Security from violence
6
Domain Prioritized Action
Facility-Based Care 30 Expand 24-hour availability of essential emergen-
cy laboratory services and timely results report-
ing at first-level and tertiary emergency units
Facility-Based Care 31 Expand 24-hour availability of essential emergen-
cy radiology services and timely results reporting
at first-level and tertiary emergency units
Facility-Based Care 32 Expand postgraduate training programmes in
emergency medicine to other universities
Emergency Prepar- 33 Incorporate chemical, biological, radiological
edness and Security emergencies into current emergency response
plans
Emergency Prepar- 34 Expand emergency care staff training to include
edness and Security strategies to address violence in the workplace,
including conflict resolution
7
INTRODUCTION
TO
GLOBAL EMERGENCY
CARE SYSTEM (ECS)
AND
WHO ECS ASSESSMENT
8
1. Introduction to Global Emergency Care System (ECS)
and the WHO ECS Assessment
10
EMERGENCY
CARE IN NEPAL
11
2. Emergency Care in Nepal
12
The Health Emergency & Disaster Management Unit (HEDMU)
was always established in 2015 with a main responsibility to coor-
dinate with the National Emergency Operation Centre (NEOC) for
any health-related disaster response. The HEDMU formulates
health emergency and disaster related policies, guidelines and
Standard Operation Procedures (SOP) for the Federal, Provincial
and local level. It aims to empower community volunteers, health
workers, medical doctors, EMTs and planners (http://
heoc.mohp.gov.np/about-us/introduction/).
HEDMU has established the HEOC centrally which comes under
the federal government. There are seven provincial governments,
five of them have been operating a PHEOC and the remaining two
have set up a temporary PHEOC whilst the provincial capital is
confirmed. A ‘Hub Hospital’ approach has been in practice creat-
ing a functional network to support the emergency medical re-
sponse. The hub hospital controls the mobilization of a rapid re-
sponse team (RRT) and an emergency medical deployment team
(EMDT) considered appropriate for the emergency response. The
main responsibilities of the RRT are to establish a working case
definition, research and prepare a list of the affected population
and the types and mode of transmission of diseases related to the
emergency. If appropriate they are responsible for managing the
isolation and quarantine of infected and suspected cases respec-
tively.
Following analysis of the epidemiology of the disaster the RRT
submit a final report with their recommendations.
The EMDT concept was introduced in Nepal to enable a quick re-
sponse by a designated team of medical doctors at hub hospitals.
However, logistics planning, certified training, training of trainers,
refresher training, ensuring quality emergency care and opera-
tion of ambulances requires strengthening to reach the minimum
requirement of quality emergency medical care in Nepal, (WHO
2019) 11.
13
2.1 EMERGENCY CARE SYSTEM ASSESSMENT WORKING GROUP
14
These included the following:
15
Steps followed for action priorities:
The following sections summarize the ECSA results and the dis-
cussions and conclusions of the ECSA working group. Action pri-
orities for each of the ECS domains are listed under each section.
16
17
RESULTS OF THE WHO
ECS ASSESSMENT
AND DISCUSSION
18
3. Results of the WHO ECS Assessment and Discussion
19
The Nepal health sector strategy 2015-2020 does not explicitly cover
prehospital, emergency unit, surgical or critical care. There is no
funding scheme specifically for emergency care. Funding comes to
public health authorities at each administrative level of government
(53 local governments, 7 provinces, 1 federal). Allocations for emer-
gency unit funding is at the discretion of facility administrators. All
participants agreed that funding for facility-based emergency care is
not adequate and that including a dedicated funding stream for
emergency care should be a priority.
There is no government funded national health insurance scheme,
but the Public Health Service Act 2018 (http://www.lawcommiss
ion.gov.np/en/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/The-Public-Health-Servi
ce-Act-2075-2018.pdf) states that no person can be denied emergen-
cy care by an ambulance or at a health facility: An emergency health
service is described as “the initial and immediate service to be provid-
ed as it is necessary to free the lives of the persons from risk, save the
lives or organs from being lost, whose lives are in the risky condition
upon falling into unexpected incident or emergency condition.” Sur-
gical care is in the list of free services provided, but not part of the
basic service package. Participants discussed the need to review ex-
isting lists of services related to essential emergency and trauma care
already included in the benefit package under development. This also
includes reviewing the public health insurance benefit package.
To date, there has been no comprehensive national status report on
injury, road safety or emergency care except for a few key data points
included in the annual Global Status Report on Road Safety. All par-
ticipants felt that the development of a national status report on
emergency care, coordinated by MOH, should be a key priority.
20
Action priorities:
System Organization, Governance and Finance
21
3.2 Emergency care data and quality improvement
22
Clinical data are not routinely used for quality improvement (QI)
purposes. However, some QI techniques and corrective strate-
gies are in place at the facility level in the form of morbidity and
mortality conferences, implementation of guidelines and proto-
cols, educational rounds, and improvements to equipment and
infrastructure. Prehospital leadership indicated morbidity and
mortality discussions and chart reviews are conducted informally
by the medical director with prehospital providers. All partici-
pants agreed that it is important to develop simple QI programs
throughout the emergency care system. Several participants sug-
gested the creation of a formal feedback mechanism from facili-
ties and facility-based providers to prehospital providers. E.g.
monthly/quarterly review meetings of all stakeholders.
Action Priorities:
Data and Quality Improvement
23
3.3 Scene care, transport and transfer
There is no formal pre-hospital system in Nepal. Respondents es-
timated that most of the country’s population do not have access
to a prehospital ambulance that can provide timely on-scene
emergency care and transport with a trained provider. This ap-
plied to both urban and rural settings.
The access number for emergency care services (ambulance) in
Kathmandu is 102, and separate numbers exist to activate other
emergency services in Kathmandu (100 for police and 101 for fire).
This number (102) is not universal across the whole country. Large
areas of the country do not have access to this. Participants felt
that <25% of the population knows and can effectively use the
emergency care service number (102) by memory. There is no for-
mal legislation that mandates telephone companies to provide
fixed line, mobile or payphone connection to emergency services
for free. Nepal Telephone Authority (2016) has mentioned in a
study report “112 can be used for emergency calls from mobile”.
All participants felt that establishment of one single, toll-free,
three-digit, universal (nationwide) access number for emergency
care services corresponding to international standards is neces-
sary.
The 102 phone operators, run by the Nepal Ambulance Service
(NAS), can dispatch emergency ambulance providers to the scene,
provide basic clinical advice to bystanders, more detailed medical
direction to the caller, field to facility communication, and locate
the caller using automated GIS system in the Kathmandu valley.
However, there is no national centralized dispatch system. Pre-
hospital care is not governed by any national or system-wide pro-
tocol. There is no national supportive clinical advisory service (i.e.,
via staffed telephone) or medical guidance (i.e., written) to sup-
port prehospital care. There are no nation-wide destination triage
protocols or systems. Decisions are made based on provider or
patient preference. Facility designations, however, do exist (such -
24
as designated trauma centers and specialized hospitals); these designa-
tions are coordinate through MoHP. All participants felt that the devel-
opment of national prehospital care protocols and supportive supervi-
sion systems are a key priority, and that a formal system of designating
preferred destinations for certain groups of patients based on standard-
ized criteria could reduce the time to needed care.
NAS employs personnel who are trained and certified emergency medi-
cal technicians or EMTs. EMT training is based on variable international
standards. There is no process of formally, nationally certifying ambu-
lance providers. Participants agreed that developing a standardized
training and certification pathway for ambulance providers is a top pri-
ority.
There are ambulances to carry patients to medical facilities, but the
number of ambulances is grossly inadequate for the needs of the popu-
lation. This is the case both for scene to facility transport as well as inter
-facility transport. There are no nationally agreed time targets for re-
sponding to the highest priority emergency calls. There is no process in
place for healthcare facilities to communicate with one another regard-
ing transfers. Neither referral nor transfer criteria are used when deter-
mining where patients should go. Patients are transferred between
healthcare facilities based on individual decisions related to patient or
provider preference. There are no protocols for prehospital provider
handover to facilities (i.e. the process required when a pre-hospital pro-
vider delivers a patient to a facility). The development of standardized
protocols for handover of patients from prehospital providers to facili-
ties is felt to be a top priority.
Regulation regarding use of ambulances exists under the Ambulance
Service Operation Guidelines-2017. It includes the three categories of
ambulances, “A” consisting of Medical Doctor and EMT, “B” with EMT &
“C” with a trained driver. But there is no explicit guideline for driver and
care provider. Participants felt that advocacy is needed to the Minis-
try of Physical Infrastructure and Transport to amend existing na-
tional traffic laws/rules for ambulances and regulation of lights/
sirens for civilian vehicles. These revisions were suggested to be
incorporated into the National Ambulance Service Operation
Guidelines.
25
There are no national regulations or policies regarding pre-
hospital equipment. Participants noted that <25% of ambulances
have adequate equipment to care for patients at the scene and
during transport. There was consensus among the group that
the development of system-wide standards for ambulance ser-
vices (including clinical care protocols, staffing standards, equip-
ment standards, process guidance, triage etc.) must be a priority.
Additionally, participants felt that there is a need to revise the Na-
tional Ambulance Services Operation Guideline to require inspec-
tion/verification of ambulances and monitor compliance to the
guidelines.
There are no laws in Nepal to protect bystanders (Good Samari-
tan) who provide help to the acutely ill or injured. Participants
indicated that in most cases people are willing to help at the sce-
ne of an acute injury or illness, but there are sometimes negative
consequences for those who do so. Participants reported that
introduction of such legislation is a priority to prevent potential
risk caused to lay people from a formal lack of protection to by-
standers.
There are some community-based basic first aid training courses
for lay people through both the public and private sectors, but
they are not widely available nor are they regulated. All partici-
pants agreed that developing a centrally coordinated process to
agree upon both standards for the content of first aid training
courses and on the trainer certification process should be a priori-
ty.
26
Action Priorities:
Scene Care, Transport and Transfer
1. Establish one single, toll-free, three-digit, universal (nationwide) ac-
cess number for emergency care services corresponding to interna-
tional standards (consider 112)
2. Develop prehospital care protocols and supportive supervision sys-
tems
3. Advocate to the Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport for
revision of existing national traffic laws for ambulances and lights/
sirens for civilian vehicles, and incorporate into National Ambulance
Operation Guidelines
4. Develop a formal prehospital system including centralized dispatch,
destination triage, time targets for priority calls, field to facility com-
munication, and mechanisms for supportive clinical guidance for the
prehospital providers (protocols or advice line)
5. When the service is appropriately ready, develop a public education
and dissemination campaign on the appropriate use of the emer-
gency care access number
6. Establish a dedicated training and certification pathway for profes-
sional prehospital providers
7. Establish a mandate requiring that the universal access number be
free on all fixed and mobile lines from all telecommunication compa-
nies
8. Implement a mechanism for monitoring with inspection/verification
at regular intervals to strengthen the implementation and enforce-
ment of the National Ambulance Operation Guideline 2018 including
equipment standards
9. Establish central standards for content and certification of first aid
trainings
10. Develop standardized protocols for handover of patients from pre-
hospital providers to facilities
11. Develop standardized protocols for inter facility transfers and refer-
rals of patients
27
3.4 Facility-based care
Respondents estimated that <25% of the population in Nepal, in both
urban and rural settings, has 24-hour access to facility-based emer-
gency care, defined as a dedicated emergency unit in which patients
are I) seen by permanent non-rotating providers trained in emergen-
cy care II) formally triaged and seen in order of acuity and III) seen
without a requirement for payment prior to care. Less than 25% of
first level hospitals and between 25-50% of tertiary hospitals have
emergency units meeting minimal functional criteria (are open 24
hours, have clinical staff continuously on site, and use an acuity-based
triage protocol).
There are non-rotating providers that permanently staff the emergen-
cy unit (EU) at tertiary level hospitals (nurses only). In first-level hos-
pitals, there are staff that register and direct patients in the emergen-
cy unit to inpatient areas, but minimal care is provided.
Providers who regularly care for emergency patients are not required
to undergo emergency-specific training as part of initial or on-going
certification in first level or tertiary level hospitals. There are no
emergency-specific post-graduate degree courses for nurses (e.g. a
Master’s in emergency, trauma or critical care nursing). For doctors,
emergency medicine training is completed as a sub-specialty after
general practice. Specialty certification exists for critical care, ortho-
pedics, and pediatric surgery. There is no trauma surgery specialty.
Participants noted that the concept and term of “mid-level” provider
in Nepal would be equivalent to “paramedics” in terms of skill level,
but that developing a cadre of mid-level providers such as advanced
nurses or physician assistants may be helpful.
28
First level hospitals do not have basic adequate functional equip-
ment for airway management (including intubation), breathing
interventions (including oxygen, bag-valve mask ventilation and
mechanical ventilation), fluid resuscitation, vasoactive medica-
tions, oxygen saturation monitoring and cardiac monitoring in
emergency units, but some tertiary level hospitals do.
There are no regulations and/or protocols mandating that acutely
ill or injured patients be clinically triaged prior to being required
to register. In practice, participants reported that depending on
the time of day and the hospital, registration and triage may be
done in different orders.
Few emergency units use standardized clinical protocols for the
treatment of patients, and those that do vary greatly and may not
be externally validated. Compliance with protocols is not tracked.
Additionally, there are no initiatives at facilities to universally
screen emergency patients for non-urgent conditions of public
health importance such as HIV, exposure to violence, substance
abuse, diabetes etc. All participants felt that system-wide proto-
cols for emergency care (including clinical and process guidance
protocols) for a core set of emergency conditions should be de-
veloped, and that screening for violence may be of interest.
There are no nationally agreed time targets for length of stay for
EU patients, and no protocols for management of emergency unit
throughput (to improve patient flow, such as ambulance diver-
sion policies, overcrowding protocols, or “hold” orders for pa-
tients pending admission). Participants estimated that few
(<25%) patients with an injury requiring emergent surgery have
access to appropriate surgical care within two hours of injury.
There is one poison information center run by an NGO but no na-
tional or centralized poison control center with standardized pro-
tocols and 24-hour availability for clinicians and the public. Partic-
ipants felt that this was important to create.
29
Action Priorities:
Facility-Based Care
1. Develop a strategic plan for reducing overcrowding of emergency
units, including consideration of length of stay limits and establish-
ing overcrowding protocols
2. Develop domestic violence screening protocols for emergency unit
patients, with linkage to OCMC
3. Develop a mechanism for regular communication of policies and
procedures to clinical providers
4. Implement standardized clinical forms with embedded standard da-
ta points for emergency units (based on review of existing form and
WHO template) and in the prehospital setting
• WHO templates available
5. Incorporate emergency care elements into existing hospital accredi-
tation standards
6. Develop system wide clinical protocols for emergency unit clinical
management of key conditions appropriate to level.
7. Develop system wide standards and protocols for key emergency
unit processes (handover, formal triage, transfer, referral, admis-
sion, discharge) appropriate to level of healthcare (WHO tools availa-
ble).
8. Expand 24-hour availability of essential emergency laboratory ser-
vices and timely results reporting at first-level and tertiary emergen-
cy units
9. Expand 24-hour availability of essential emergency radiology ser-
vices and timely results reporting at first-level and tertiary emergen-
cy units
10. Expand postgraduate training programs in emergency medicine to
other universities
11. Develop a strategy for a government-run national poison control
center for providers and the public
30
3.5 Emergency preparedness and security
A State Party Self-Assessment Annual Reporting Tool (SPAR) has been
completed in Nepal and a Joint External Evaluation (JEE) is planned for
Q1 2021. Risk assessments are conducted for various pathogens/
situations (Ebola, Zika, influenza, floods), but a comprehensive strategic
national emergency risk assessment has not been done. Inventories
and maps of resources for emergency response are available and have
been updated in the past five years, but they are done by individual sec-
tors or agencies and are not linked at the national level.
31
Facility level multi-hazard emergency response plans are not required at
first-level hospitals but are required at third level hospitals, except for
chemical, biological and radiological weapons. There is no system in
place for detecting and responding to radiological and nuclear emer-
gencies.
Action Priorities:
Emergency Preparedness and Security
32
Technical Committee Meeting on
WHO-GoN Emergency Care System Strengthening Project - Phase 1
33
NEXT
STEPS
34
4. Next Steps
35
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36
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7. The Constitution of Nepal 2015. https://www.wipo.int/edocs/lexdocs/laws/
en/np/np029en.pdf. Accessed 22 December 2019.
8. The Public Health Service Act, 2075 (2018). http://
www.lawcommission.gov.np/en/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/The-Public-
Health-Service-Act-2075-2018.pdf. Accessed 22 December 2019.
9. Consultation paper on integrated emergency communication and response
system (IECRS) for Nepal. Nepal Telecome Authority (2016).
10. Rescue procedure by helicopter for pregnant and nursing mother (English
version not available) https://mowcsc.gov.np/uploads/uploads/
oYQ3l49GrpwDH26ZwXIcC5MeZMZnHAPis5wX3fJV.pdf
11. WHO (2019). Study Report on Stakeholder Mapping of Pre-Hospital Care
Service Providers and Enablers in Nepal
12. Nepal Health Sector Strategy 2015-2020. Ministry of Health and Population,
Government of Nepal
13. Integrated Training Package on Emergency Preparedness and Response for
Rapid Response Team (RRT, 2017), Epidemiology and Disease Control Divi-
sion, MoHP
37
ANNEX
38
LIST OF MEMBERS OF TECHNICAL COORDINATION AND DATA COLLECTION
TEAMS - ECSA - NEPAL
39
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS IN THE ECSA - NEPAL STAKEHOLDERS
CONSULTATION
Central Level Mr. Khag Raj Baral Ministry of Health and Popu- Secretary
lation
Central Level Dr. Dipendra Raman Singh Quality Standard and Regu- Chief
lation Division, MoHP
Central Level Mr. Mahendra Shrestha Health Coordination Division Chief
Central Level Mr. Bhogendra Raj Dotel Management Division, De- Director
partment of Health Service
Central Level Dr. Bikash Devkota Planning, Policy and Moni- Chief
toring Division
Central Level Dr. Bibek Lal Karna Epidemiology Disease Con- Director
trol Division, MoHP
Central Level Dr. Tara Natha Pokhrel Curative Service Division, Chief
Department of Health Ser-
vice
Central Level Ms. Roshani TuiTui Nursing & Social Security, Director
Ministry of Health and Popu-
lation
Central Level Mr. Sagar Dahal Health Emergency and Dis- Chief
aster Management Unit
Central Level Dr. Guna Nidhi Sharma Policy and Planning Division, Officer
Ministry of Health and Popu-
lation
Central Level Ms. Yeshoda Aryal Health Coordination Divi- Senior Public Health
sion, Ministry of Health and Administrator
Population
Central Level Mr. Rajmani Niraula Ministry of Health and Popu- Officer
lation
Central Level Dr. Prakash Brd. Curative Service Division, Focal Point
Department of Health Ser-
vice
Central Level Mr. Amrit Pokharel Curative Service Division, Focal Point
Department of Health Ser-
vice
Central Level Dr. Dinesh K. Lamsal Civil Service Hospital Emergency In-
charge
Central Level Mr. Shambhu Kafle Ministry of Health and Popu- Senior Public Health
lation Administrator
Central Level Mr. Tulsi Prasad Dahal Ministry of Health and Popu- Officer
lation
40
Province Name Agency Designation
Central Level Mr. Krishna Lamsal Ministry of Health and Senior Public Health
Population Administrator
Central Level Mr. Arun Kumar Khatri Ministry of Health and Officer
Population
Central Level Dr. Naveen Phuyal Nepal Army Medical College Focal Point
Central Level Mr. Khem Raj Dhungana Curative Service Division, Staff
Department of Health Ser-
vice
Central Level Mr. Ram Kumar Mahato Health Emergency and Officer
Disaster Management Unit
Central Level/ Dr. Reuben Samuel WHO Country Office Team Leader
Stakeholder
Central Level/ Dr. Subash Neupane Health Emergency and WHO WHE
Stakeholder Disaster Management Unit
Central Level/ Ms. Sajeeb Gautam Health Emergency and WHO WHE
Stakeholder Disaster Management Unit
41
Province Name Agency Designation
Province 2 Mr. Vijay Kumar Jha Regional Health Directorate, Senior Public Health
Province 2 Administrator
Province 3 Mr. Lalbabu Ray Regional Health Directorate, Officer
Province 2
Province 3 Ms. Sanju Roy Ministry of Social Development, Officer
Hetauda
Province 3 Mr. Gokarna Mani Du- Ministry of Social Development Secretary
wadi
Province 3 Ms. Sanu Maya Dangol Lalitpur Metropolitan City, Fire Focal Point
Fighter Department
Province 3 Dr. Ram Hari Regmi Gajuri Municipality, Dhading Focal Point
Gandaki Province Ms. Bhagwati Sedai PN Campus Lecturer, Road safe- Professor / Re-
ty searcher
Province 5 Ms. Asma Gyawali Gautam Buddha Community Nursing Officer
Heart Hospital, Butwal
Karnali Province Mr. Shyamlal Acharya Ministry of Social Development Focal Point
Karnali Province Dr. Pujan Rokaya Karnali Academy of Health Sci- Director
ences
Sudurpaschim Prov- Dr. Jagadish Joshi Seti Zonal Hospital Focal Point
ince
Group B Service Providers
Central Level Dr. Navin Phyyal Birendra Hospital Focal Point
Central Level DSP Prabhu Dhakal Nepal Police Central Disaster Focal Point
Management Division
Central Level Dr Kedar Prasad Centu- National Academy of Meical Emergency In-
ry Sciences, Bir Hospital charge
42
Province Name Agency Designation
Central Level Dr. Suresh Nepal National Academy of Meical Sci- Focal Point
ences, Bir Hospital
Central Level Ms. Nabina Karki Sahid Gangalal Hospital Nursing Officer
Central Level/ Prof. Dr. Pradip Vaidhya Nepal Ambulance Service Professor / Research-
Stakeholder er
Central Level/ Mr. Bipul Khanal Nepal Red Cross Society Emergency Incharge
Stakeholder
Central Level/ Mr. Ganesh Kumar Jimee National Society for Earthquake Director
Stakeholder Technology
Central Level/ Ms. Manisha Panthee National Society for Earthquake Director
Stakeholder Technology
Central Level/ Prof. Ramesh K. Maharjan Trivhuvan University Teaching Professor / Research-
Stakeholder Hospital er
Central Level/ Dr. Rashmisha Majarjan Nepal Disaster and Emergency Focal Point
Stakeholder Medicine Center
Province 3 Dr. Ashis Shrestha Patan Academy of Health Scienc- Emergency Incharge
es
43
Province Name Agency Designation
Gandaki Province Mr. Arjun Bhandari NID Officer
Sudurpaschim Mr. Bir Bahadur Nepali United Mission to Nepal Focal Point
Province/
Stakeholder
Province 3/ Mr. Ranu Malla WTO Officer
Stakeholder
44
SCHEDULE OF THE STAKEHOLDERS CONSULTATION ON ECSA - NEPAL
45
46
47