Publications by authors named "Bert Dercksen"

Article Synopsis
  • The study assessed the quality of EMS care by analyzing deployment reports and measuring how time was spent during various phases of EMS operations, raising questions about the relevance of time metrics in evaluating care quality.
  • A focused ethnographic approach was used, involving video recordings and interviews, which helped outline the EMS care process through the development of a model known as SPART.
  • The results provided insights into the effectiveness of clinical reasoning and the overall quality of care by analyzing the nature, order, and duration of EMS activities across different operational periods (response, on-scene, transport).
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Purpose: To evaluate the pre-hospital administration of tranexamic acid in ambulance-treated trauma patients with a severe hemorrhage after the implementation of tranexamic acid administration in the Dutch pre-hospital protocol.

Methods: All patients with a severe hemorrhage who were treated and conveyed by EMS professionals between January 2015, and December 2017, to any trauma-receiving emergency department in the eight participating trauma regions in the Netherlands, were included. A severe hemorrhage was defined as extracranial injury with > 20% body volume blood loss, an extremity amputation above the wrist or ankle, or a grade ≥ 4 visceral organ injury.

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Background: Clinical reasoning is a crucial task within the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) care process. Both contextual and cognitive factors make the task susceptible to errors. Understanding the EMS care process' structure could help identify and address issues that interfere with clinical reasoning.

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Background: A thorough handover in the emergency department (ED) is of great importance for improving the quality and safety in the chain of care. The satisfaction of handover may reflect the quality of handover. Research to discover the variables influencing the satisfaction of handovers is scarce.

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