Beyond the Underground: Emergency Geriatric Hospital Relocation in Conflict - A Healthcare Innovation Model
Sharon Ost-Mor, Elena Titelman, Eduard Zlyesov, Inna Shugaev

TL;DR
This paper examines the emergency relocation of a large rehabilitation hospital during a conflict, offering insights into maintaining complex medical care during crises.
Contribution
The study provides a novel model for emergency preparedness in specialized healthcare facilities during active conflict.
Findings
A successful evacuation of 60 medically complex patients was achieved within three hours during active conflict.
The relocation maintained operational independence and continued comprehensive rehabilitation services underground.
The study offers practical guidelines for relocating vulnerable patients during crises.
Abstract
The unprecedented emergency relocation of Israel’s largest rehabilitation facility in the north, Fliman Medical Center, to an underground facility during active conflict presents a unique case study in healthcare emergency management. This research addresses a critical gap in the literature on emergency preparedness for specialized healthcare facilities during crisis situations. This qualitative single-case study examines the strategic planning and execution of relocating individuals requiring ventilator support and other complex medical care amid active conflict. Data were collected through in-depth interviews with the emergency coordinator and analysis of contemporaneous documentation. Over eleven months of security challenges, the facility successfully implemented a carefully coordinated evacuation plan, safely transferring sixty medically complex patients—along with essential…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDisaster Response and Management · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies · Health and Conflict Studies
