• Prehosp Emerg Care · Jul 2011

    Utilization of emergency medical services in a large urban area: description of call types and temporal trends.

    • Kevin G Munjal, Robert A Silverman, John Freese, James D Braun, Bradley J Kaufman, Douglas Isaacs, Andrew Werner, Mayris Webber, Charles B Hall, and David J Prezant.
    • Office of Medical Affairs, The New York City Fire Department, Brooklyn, New York 11201, USA.
    • Prehosp Emerg Care. 2011 Jul 1;15(3):371-80.

    BackgroundEmergency medical services (EMS) systems are used by the public for a range of medically related problems.ObjectiveTo understand and analyze the patterns of EMS utilization and trends over time in a large urban EMS system so that we may better direct efforts toward improving those services.MethodsThe 63 call type designations from all New York City (NYC) 9-1-1 EMS calls between 1999 and 2007 were obtained and grouped into 10 broad and 30 specific medical categories. Aggregated numbers of total EMS calls and individual categories were divided by NYC resident population estimates to determine utilization rates. Temporal trends were evaluated for statistical significance with Spearman's rho (ρ).ResultsThere were 9,916,904 EMS calls between 1999 and 2007, with an average of 1,101,878 calls/year. Utilization rates increased from 129.5 to 141.9 calls/1,000 residents/year over the study period (average annual rise of 1.16%). Among all medical/surgical call types (excluding trauma), there was an average annual increase of 1.8%/year. The most substantial increases were among "psychiatric/drug related" (+5.6%/year), "generalized illness" (+3.2%/year), and "environmental related" calls (+2.9%/year). The largest decrease was among "respiratory" calls (-1.2%/year), specifically for "asthma" (-5.0%/year). For trauma call types, there was an annual average decrease of 0.4%/year, with the category of "violence related" calls having the greatest decline (-3.3%/year).ConclusionThere was an increase in overall EMS utilization rates, though not all call types rose uniformly. Rather, a number of significant trends were identified reflecting either changing medical needs or changing patterns of EMS utilization in NYC's population.

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