Abstract

Russia’s national healthcare system is undergoing significant changes. Those changes which affect healthcare financing are particularly vital. As has often been the case in other nations, the emergency care field is at the forefront of such reforms. The ongoing challenges constitute the environment in which the hospital-based specialty of emergency medicine needs to develop as part of a larger system. Emergency care has to evolve in order to match true needs of the population existing today. New federal regulations recently adopted have recognized emergency departments as the new in-hospital component of emergency care, providing the long-needed legal foundation upon which the new specialty can advance. General knowledge of Western-style emergency departments in terms of their basic setup and function has been widespread among Russia’s medical professionals for some time. Several emergency departments are functioning in select regions as pilots. Preliminary data stemming from their operation have supported a positive effect on efficiency of hospital bed utilization and on appropriate use of specialists and specialized hospital departments. In the pre-hospital domain, there has been a reduction of specialized ambulance types and of the number of physicians staffing all ambulances in favor of midlevel providers. Still, a debate continues at all levels of the medical hierarchy regarding the correct future path for emergency care in Russia with regard to adaptation and sustainability of any foreign models in the context of the country’s unique national features.

Highlights

  • Very few articles describing the state of emergency medicine and emergency care in Russia are available in English [1, 2]

  • The first has to do with the future well-being of Russia’s emergency care providers—a characteristic directly affecting their ability to consistently carry out their vital role

  • The need for a hospital-based physician practice focused solely on emergency care is slowly coming into recognition, immersed in a pool of diverging professional and public opinions held at a time of substantial economic hardships

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Summary

Background

Very few articles describing the state of emergency medicine and emergency care in Russia are available in English [1, 2]. This paper reviews select topics pertaining to prospects for emergency medicine development in the Russian Federation (Fig. 1). It aims to generate further interest on the subject among providers who practice emergency medicine or are otherwise involved in emergency care in other nations

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