• Prehosp Disaster Med · Jun 2012

    The accuracy of emergency medical dispatcher-assisted layperson-caller pulse check using the medical priority dispatch system protocol.

    • Greg Scott, Jeff Clawson, Mark Rector, Dave Massengale, Mike Thompson, Brett Patterson, and Christopher H O Olola.
    • International Academies of Emergency Dispatch, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. greg.scott@emergencydispatch.org
    • Prehosp Disaster Med. 2012 Jun 1; 27 (3): 252-9.

    IntroductionKnowing the pulse rate of a patient in a medical emergency can help to determine patient acuity and the level of medical care required. Little evidence exists regarding the ability of a 911 layperson-caller to accurately determine a conscious patient's pulse rate. Hypothesis The hypothesis of this study was that, when instructed by a trained emergency medical dispatcher (EMD) using the scripted Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) protocol Pulse Check Diagnostic Tool (PCDxT), a layperson-caller can detect a carotid pulse and accurately determine the pulse rate in a conscious person.MethodsThis non-randomized and non-controlled prospective study was conducted at three different public locations in the state of Utah (USA). A healthy, mock patient's pulse rate was obtained using an electrocardiogram (ECG) monitor. Layperson-callers, in turn, initiated a simulated 911 phone call to an EMD call-taker who provided instructions for determining the pulse rate of the patient. Layperson accuracy was assessed using correlations between the layperson-caller's finding and the ECG reading.ResultsTwo hundred sixty-eight layperson-callers participated; 248 (92.5%) found the pulse of the mock patient. There was a high correlation between pulse rates obtained using the ECG monitor and those found by the layperson-callers, overall (94.6%, P < .001), and by site, gender, and age.ConclusionsLayperson-callers, when provided with expert, scripted instructions by a trained 911 dispatcher over the phone, can accurately determine the pulse rate of a conscious and healthy person. Improvements to the 911 instructions may further increase layperson accuracy.

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