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Prehospital Transport and Whole-Body Vibration

  • Book

  • September 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5342467

Prehospital Transport and Whole-body Vibration helps medical transport professionals and vehicle and equipment designers understand the concepts of human response to whole body vibration in order to shed light on the ongoing debate on the effectiveness of current immobilization systems. Written for anyone working with patients who have been medically transported, such as emergency medicine physicians, medics, ER nurses, and those researching and studying whole-body vibration (medical students, ergonomists, human factor researchers, engineers, system developers), this book takes an informative look at situations that occur in the air, on the sea and in ground medical vehicles en route to a hospital.

The transport of supine humans under these conditions may lead to severe involuntary motions of body segments, which can generate discomfort, pain and secondary injuries, especially when the patient has a suspected spinal cord injury. This book will help medical transport professionals and vehicle and equipment designers understand the basic concepts of human response to whole body vibration and shed light on the ongoing debate on the effectiveness of current immobilization systems.

Please Note: This is an On Demand product, delivery may take up to 11 working days after payment has been received.

Table of Contents

1. Fundamentals of motion and biomechanics 2. Measurement of human response to vibration 3. Biodynamics of supine humans subjected to vibration and shocks 4. Discomfort in whole-body vibration 5. Justification and efficacy of prehospital immobilization systems

Authors

Salam Rahmatalla Pprofessor of Structural Mechanics and Biomechanics, Iowa Technology Institute, The University of Iowa, USA. Dr. Salam Rahmatalla is a professor of structural mechanics and biomechanics. His research focuses on the positive and negative effects of vibration on humans and structures. Dr. Rahmatalla has authored and coauthored more than 20 peer-reviewed journal articles and participated in many national and international conferences in the area of human response to vibration. His present research interests are: multi-body dynamics, whole body vibration, structural health monitoring, damage detection and human movement. Dr. Rahmatalla is an active member of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) in the area of human response to vibration.