The medical and emergency care services provided to players and
spectators at UEFA EURO 2012 in Poland and Ukraine are meeting the
standards required by UEFA.
With UEFA EURO 2012 now in full swing, UEFA medical representatives
have been assisting local stadium and medical service operators by
conducting stadium medical checks to ensure the service provided to
visiting teams and spectators meets requirements.
The first
matches at every stadium were attended before and during the match to
review the provision of pitch-side medical services for players and
officials, ambulances and medical posts for spectators, and the overall
co-ordination of emergency care. These inspections are the culmination
of considerable work by the local medical service, stadium operators and
the UEFA Medical Committee over the last few years to ensure that
stadiums are ready to meet the challenge of safely hosting UEFA EURO
2012 matches.
"For UEFA it is really important that matches at
EURO meet the standards that the teams, the players, and the spectators
expect," said UEFA Medical Committee chairman Michel D'Hooghe. "There
has been an extremely impressive commitment by Poland and Ukraine to
ensure that their stadiums are safe venues, equipped and staffed with
medical personnel at the level that one would expect of any top stadium.
Our inspections are the last stage of the preparation process,
fine-tuning a notable effort by stadium operators and local organisers
to provide a high-quality medical EURO."
All UEFA EURO 2012
matches are equipped to adhere to UEFA's minimum medical requirements,
which ensure the availability of defibrillators, oxygen, stretchers,
airway equipment and other life-saving equipment for anyone who may need
treatment. These standards will become mandatory for all UEFA matches
from the start of the 2012/13 season and reflect the work of the UEFA
Medical Committee in promoting the optimum health of players.
"It
has been impressive to see on all our inspections how the stadiums have
risen to the challenge of providing a high-class medical service," said
Professor Stewart Hillis, UEFA tournament general medical officer for
Poland. "Services are planned, organised and implemented to the kind of
standards that one would expect at a tournament of this size and
profile. Of course no one wants medical cases to arise, but they do
happen within football stadia both to players or spectators. Our aim is
to ensure that when this happens, the stadium is equipped to manage the
situation
Home »
Football News
» Medical challenges being met
Medical challenges being met
Posted by FIAN DRUVA
Posted on 2:39 AM
with No comments
0 comments:
Post a Comment