• Eur J Emerg Med · Feb 2017

    Observational Study

    Paediatric workload of an adult retrieval service in Scotland.

    • Christina L Harry, Jon Mccormack, Michael Donald, and Alasdair R Corfield.
    • aEmergency Medical Retrieval Service bRoyal Hospital for Children cRoyal Alexandra Hospital, Glasgow dRoyal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh eNinewells Hospital, Dundee, UK.
    • Eur J Emerg Med. 2017 Feb 1; 24 (1): 67-70.

    AbstractThe Emergency Medical Retrieval Service (EMRS) provides adults with life-threatening conditions in remote areas with timely interventions and rapid access to definitive medical care, including a primary response service. Paediatric patients are managed under a separate network. Despite this, there has been an increase in paediatric retrievals by EMRS. We aim to inform future service development and ascertain how EMRS can serve the needs of this cohort. This is a retrospective, observational study. Raw data were retrieved from the database of paediatric patients retrieved by EMRS for 9 years. A total of 112 paediatric patients were retrieved; 46% were primary retrievals. The most common injuries were head injuries (n=29) and orthopaedic injuries (n=16). Common interventions include fluid resuscitation (n=34), ventilation (n=22) and sedation/paralysis (n=22).This study describes the evolution of an adult retrieval service to cover paediatric patients in Scotland outside the remit of the paediatric retrieval service.

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