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Title:Enhancing crisis response efficiency through ICT : a Delphi study on operational and decision-making improvements in mass casualty incidents
Authors:ID Režek, Primož (Author)
ID Žvanut, Boštjan (Author)
Files:URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188825008202?via%3Dihub
 
URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sftr.2025.101259
 
.pdf RAZ_Rezek_Primoz_2025.pdf (637,65 KB)
MD5: 36931553647E5E366EE93A308ADB22BF
 
Language:English
Work type:Unknown
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:FVZ - Faculty of Health Sciences
Abstract:The potential of information and communication technology (ICT) to improve coordination and decision-making during the training and operational phases of mass casualty incidents (MCIs) has not yet been sufficiently explored. This three-round Delphi study investigates whether ICT use in MCIs can enhance decision-making and increase victim survival rates. The study was conducted from 10 February to 20 September 2024, with 25 international experts from academia, clinical practice, and health informatics. The results were summarised using a SWOT analysis, confirming ICT's perceived potential in MCI management. The analysis revealed a critical asymmetry: while the strengths and opportunities were mainly associated with technical factors (e.g. the effectiveness of drones, global positioning systems, artificial intelligence, dashboards, and virtual and augmented reality to improve the cost-effectiveness of training), weaknesses and threats were mainly social and organisational. These included a lack of standardisation and interoperability, limited ICT-supported training, infrastructure and cybersecurity gaps, resistance to change, legal constraints, underfunding, low technological readiness, and scepticism about the cost-effectiveness of ICT in real-world MCI contexts. Our findings highlight the gap between technological readiness and implementation challenges, suggesting that ICT innovation alone is insufficient without supportive governance, infrastructure, and stakeholder engagement. As the first Delphi study of its kind, it provides a strategic foundation for evidence-based ICT integration in training and operational MCI responses. The findings provide clear priorities for future policy development and empirical validation, emphasising the need to address persistent non-technical barriers to realise ICT’s full potential in crisis management.
Keywords:mass casualty incidents (MCI), information and communication technology (ICT), artificial intelligence (AI), drones, electronic triage systems, delphi study, SWOT analysis
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Publication date:30.08.2025
Year of publishing:2025
Number of pages:str. 1-14
Numbering:Vol. 10, [article no.] 101259
PID:20.500.12556/RUP-21690 This link opens in a new window
UDC:614.8.028.4
ISSN on article:2666-1888
DOI:10.1016/j.sftr.2025.101259 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:248139011 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUP:08.09.2025
Views:528
Downloads:7
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Record is a part of a journal

Title:Sustainable futures
Publisher:Elsevier Ltd.
ISSN:2666-1888
COBISS.SI-ID:56399875 This link opens in a new window

Licences

License:CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Description:The most restrictive Creative Commons license. This only allows people to download and share the work for no commercial gain and for no other purposes.

Secondary language

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:množične nesreče, informacijska in komunikacijska tehnologija (IK), umetna inteligenca, droni, elektronski sistemi za triažo, Delfi študija, SWOT analiza


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