Prehospital emergency care : official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors
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Introduction: Compassion fatigue (CF) is defined as the acute or gradual loss of benevolence that occurs after exposure to critical incident stress. Colloquially referred to as the "cost of caring," CF can affect an individual's future response to stressful situations and is unhealthy for caregivers. Objective: To identify the prevalence and predictors of CF in EMS professionals. ⋯ Additionally, those with concomitant traumatic stress syndromes, such as vicarious trauma and burnout, were 4.61 and 3.35 times more likely to have CF, respectively. Conclusions: CF is a considerable concern for EMS professionals and there are several modifiable factors that may reduce the prevalence of this cumulative stress syndrome. Additional research should focus on causal factors and mitigation strategies, as well as the individual and agency impact of CF on the prehospital work environment.
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Objective: Recent evolution of the EMS system has resulted in an increased role for specially trained advanced clinicians (physicians, physician assistants, and registered nurses) in out-of-hospital field response. Despite this expansion into the out-of-hospital environment there is a lack of data regarding the actual clinical roles and activity of these clinicians in the United States. We seek to describe the clinical roles of advanced clinicians in the field through description of skills used during both 9-1-1 field responses and interfacility transports in the state of Pennsylvania. ⋯ Patient demographics for each clinician type were similar. Conclusions: Our findings indicate advanced clinicians provide care at the ALS and specialty care levels in similar patient populations with little difference in the roles between clinician types in the out-of-hospital environment. Our data demonstrate successful integration of advanced clinicians into the out-of-hospital environment in Pennsylvania and provide a framework for future planning and expansion of these roles and responsibilities.
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Introduction: One of the six guiding principles of the EMS Agenda 2050 is to foster a socially equitable care delivery system. A specific recommendation within this principle is that "local EMS leadership, educators and clinicians [should] reflect the diversity of their communities." Research has shown that women comprise a minority of emergency medicine services (EMS) field clinicians. In academic settings, women are represented at lower rates among experienced EMS faculty than within Emergency Medicine clinicians or faculty at large. ⋯ Thematic evaluation of the qualitative responses showed that respondents felt there were fewer barriers to mentorship and professional advancement opportunities in local work versus national engagement. Conclusions: In a survey evaluating representation of female professionals in EMS, participants reported on their career representations, and experiences of gender-based inequity within their EMS career settings. Several opportunities exist to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion for women in EMS based on our findings.
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Observational Study
Cerebral oximetry during out-of-hospital resuscitation: Pilot Study of First Responder Implementation.
Background: Anoxic brain injury is a common mode of death following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). We assessed the course of regional cerebral oxygen saturation (rSO2) at the outset and during first responder resuscitation to understand its relationship with return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and functional survival. Methods: We undertook a prospective observational investigation of adult OHCA patients treated by a first-responder EMS agency in King County, WA. ⋯ Among patients who achieved ROSC, those who would survive with CPC 1-2 had a higher rSO2 cerebral oximetry following ROSC than nonsurvivors (74% vs. 60%, p = 0.04 at 5 minutes post ROSC), a difference that was not evident in the minutes prior to ROSC (55% vs. 51% at 3 minutes prior to ROSC, p = 0.5). Conclusion: In this observational study, where first responders applied cerebral oximetry, higher rSO2 during the course of care predicted ROSC among all patients and predicted favorable survival among those who achieved ROSC. Future investigation should evaluate whether and how treatments might modify rSO2 and in turn may influence prognosis.
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Study Objective: Most 911 calls result in ambulance transport to an emergency department. In some cases, transport is refused or deemed unnecessary. The frequency of pediatric non-transport is unknown. ⋯ Conclusion: Almost one-third of pediatric 911 activations result in non-transport. Although very few children have been included in pilots of alternate transport processes to date, non-transport is actually more common in children than adults. More work is needed to understand better the patient safety and economic implications of this practice.