Prehospital emergency care : official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors
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Medication automatic dispensing systems (ADS) have been implemented in many settings, including fire-based EMS stations. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of in-station ADSs on controlled substance administration rates and EMS response intervals. ⋯ In this system, medication ADS implementation was associated with an increase in the rates of controlled substance administration and a decrease in the time units were at hospitals.
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Introduction: Information regarding prehospital ketamine use in the pediatric population is limited as existing literature focuses primarily on critical care and air transport. Our objective was to describe patient characteristics among pediatric EMS patients who received ketamine. Secondarily, we assessed effectiveness, deviation from recommended dosing, and adverse outcomes of pediatric EMS patients who received ketamine. ⋯ Conclusion: In this large review of pediatric prehospital ketamine use, ketamine was primarily used for analgesia, but was frequently used for other indications. Most patients were observed to improve after ketamine use, with most injured patients reporting decreases in pain scores. We observed few significant adverse events related to ketamine use in this population.
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Evidence-based guidelines that provide recommendations for clinical care or operations are increasingly being published to inform the EMS community. The quality of evidence evaluation and methodological rigor undertaken to develop and publish these recommendations vary. This can negatively affect dissemination, education, and implementation efforts. ⋯ In this special contribution, we aim to describe the current state of published guidelines available to the EMS community informed by two recent systematic reviews of existing prehospital evidenced based guidelines (EBGs). We further aim to provide a description of key elements of EBGs, methods that can be used to assess their quality, and concrete recommendations for guideline developers to improve the quality of evidence evaluation, guideline development, and reporting. Finally, we outline six key recommendations for improving prehospital EBGs, informed by systematic reviews of prehospital guidelines performed by the Prehospital Guidelines Consortium.
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The National Emergency Medical Services Information System (NEMSIS) is a federally funded program designed to standardize Emergency Medical Services (EMS) patient care reporting and facilitate state and national data repositories for the assessment and improvement of EMS systems of care. This manuscript characterizes the 2020 submissions to the National EMS Database, detailing the strengths and limitations associated with use of these data for public health surveillance, improving prehospital patient care, critical resource allocation, clinician safety, system quality assurance and research purposes. ⋯ The National EMS Database is a free and publicly available resource for evaluating EMS system utilization, response, and prehospital patient care. Understanding the characteristics of the underlying dataset and known data limitations will help ensure proper analysis and reporting of research and quality metrics based on nationally standardized NEMSIS data.
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Background: Previous studies comparing the treatment of males and females during out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) have been contradictory. Understanding differences in treatment and outcomes is important to assuring appropriate care to both sexes. Hypothesis: Females with OHCA receive fewer interventions and have lower rates of survival to hospital discharge when compared to males with OHCA. ⋯ Additionally, odds of receiving epinephrine (OR 1.22, 95% CI [1.16, 1.27]) and odds of receiving defibrillation (OR 1.36, 95% CI [1.29, 1.44]) were both higher in males, and time to achieve first ROSC was no longer associated with sex (p = 0.114, 95% CI [-3.32, 31.11]). Conclusions: After adjusting for case characteristics, females were less likely to receive some key treatments, including epinephrine and defibrillation. Females also had poorer survival to hospital discharge but had higher odds of surviving to ED arrival.