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Pediatric emergency care · Apr 2024
Closing the Loop: The Value of Outcome Letters for Prehospital Pediatric Care.
- Candice McGahern, Zachary Cantor, Benjamin De Mendonca, Jennifer Dawson, Liane Boisvert, Dale Dalgleish, Dennis Newhook, Deepti Reddy, Natalie Bresee, and Fuad Alnaji.
- From the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
- Pediatr Emerg Care. 2024 Apr 1; 40 (4): 261264261-264.
ObjectivesProviding emergency care to acutely ill or injured children is stressful and requires a high level of training. Paramedics who provide prehospital care are typically not involved in the circle of care and do not receive patient outcome information. The aim of this quality improvement project was to assess paramedics' perceptions of standardized outcome letters pertaining to acute pediatric patients that they had treated and transported to an emergency department.MethodsBetween December 2019 and December 2020, 888 outcome letters were distributed to paramedics who provided care for 370 acute pediatric patients transported to the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa, Canada. All paramedics who received a letter (n = 470) were invited to participate in a survey that collected their perceptions and feedback about the letters, as well as their demographic information.ResultsThe response rate was 37% (172/470). Approximately half of the respondents were Primary Care Paramedics and half Advanced Care Paramedics. The respondents' median age was 36 years, median years of service was 12 years, and 64% identified as male. Most agreed that the outcome letters contained information pertinent to their practice (91%), allowed them to reflect on care they had provided (87%), and confirmed clinical suspicions (93%). Respondents indicated that they found the letters useful for 3 reasons: 1) increases capacity to link differential diagnoses, prehospital care, or patient outcomes; 2) contributes to a culture of continuous learning and improvement; and 3) gives closure, reduces stress, or provides answers for difficult cases. Suggestions for improvement included providing more information, provision of letters on all patients transported, faster turnaround time between call and receipt of letter and inclusion of recommendations or interventions/assessments.ConclusionsParamedics appreciated receiving hospital-based patient outcome information after their provision of care and reported that the letters offered opportunities for closure, reflection, and learning.Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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