• Prehosp Emerg Care · Jan 2023

    A Qualitative Analysis of the Experiences of EMS Clinicians in Recognizing and Treating Witnessed Cardiac Arrests.

    • Susan J Burnett, Johanna C Innes, Renoj Varughese, Eric Frazer, and Brian M Clemency.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, New York.
    • Prehosp Emerg Care. 2023 Jan 1; 27 (6): 758766758-766.

    BackgroundSurvival from out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) increases when effective cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and defibrillation are performed early. Patients who suffer OHCA in front of emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians have greater likelihood of survival, but little is known about how EMS clinicians think about and experience those events. We sought to understand how EMS clinicians assessed patients who devolved to cardiac arrest in their presence and uncover the perceived barriers and facilitators associated with recognizing and treating witnessed OHCAs.MethodsEMS clinicians who had attended an EMS-witnessed OHCA and consented to participate were interviewed within 72 hours of the index case. Transcripts of the interviews were coded through the consolidated framework for implementation research to understand enabling and constraining factors involved and the predictability and anticipation of OHCA and subsequent management of patient care. Utstein data points, interventions, and associated times were extracted from the medical records.ResultsWe interviewed 29 EMS clinicians who attended 27 EMS-witnessed OHCAs. Twenty-six (96.3%) of the EMS-witnessed OHCAs were preceded by prodromal symptoms and were classified as predictable. Of the predictable cases, clinicians anticipated 53.8% of them and attributed the prodromes of other cases to serious but not peri-arrest etiologies. Participants described various environmental, crew, and intrapersonal enabling and constraining factors associated with recognizing and treating EMS-witnessed OHCAs. Environmental elements included issues of safety and physical locations, crew elements included familiarity with their partners and working with them in the past, and intrapersonal elements included abilities to collect information and stress associated with responding to and managing the calls.ConclusionRecognition and treatment of EMS-witnessed OHCAs are influenced by numerous environmental, crew, and intrapersonal factors. Future training and education on OHCA should include diverse locations, situations, and crew make-up, along with nontraditional patient complaints to broaden experiences associated with cardiac arrest management.

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