Emergency medicine journal : EMJ
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Appropriate dispatch of critical care teams to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has been identified as a research priority emergency care in the UK. The study aimed to understand the criteria informing the decision to dispatch a critical care physician-paramedic prehospital team to OHCA in one UK region. ⋯ The only 100% agreement in dispatch criteria was 'witnessed arrest'. Otherwise, variation existed and additional information, like identification of frailty, was gathered to support nuanced decision-making. Wider research across the UK would help identify factors and commonalities in OHCA physician-paramedic dispatch to target improved survival rates.
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Children with head injury are commonly transported to the ED by ambulance. However, most of those conveyed are deemed non-serious and are discharged at triage. Research is needed to explore the factors that influence paramedics when deciding to convey children with minor head injury to the ED, and to establish whether a clinical decision tool designed to support them would be beneficial. ⋯ Paramedics generally feel a lack of confidence in assessing and managing children with head injury. A decision tool, coupled with training and useful feedback from EDs following conveyance, would be useful to help improve decision-making.
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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) primarily affects older adults. Individuals in nursing homes are often elderly with significant comorbidities. Nursing homes are staffed by healthcare workers, able to respond immediately to cardiac arrest, including provision of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). We aimed to describe the characteristics, treatments and outcome of individuals sustaining an OHCA in nursing and care home settings in England. ⋯ Survival after OHCA in a nursing home setting was low, despite high rates of key interventions, such as bystander CPR. There may be an opportunity to optimise the availability of AEDs within nursing homes.