Publications by authors named "Juan Antonio Peculo Carrasco"

Objectives: To identify factors related to patients' feeling of safety during prehospital emergencies.

Material And Methods: Descriptive, multicenter cross-sectional study in the context of "061" emergency response services of Andalusia, Spain. Data were collected from April 2021 to March 2022.

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Aim: To determine the factors related with the perception of feeling safe during pre-hospital emergency care.

Methods: A multi-centred, cross-sectional study. Data collection from April 2021 to March 2022, in the Centro de Emergencias Sanitarias 061 (Andalusia, Spain).

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Aims: To systematically describe the factors influencing the perception of feeling safe among patients receiving pre-hospital emergency care.

Background: Patient safety is a top priority worldwide. Little is known about how patients perceive safety during emergency health care and what the related factors are.

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Aims And Objectives: To determine the feelings of safety among patients taken to hospital after requesting urgent care, based on their experiences and those of their carers and prehospital emergency care professionals.

Background: Little research has been performed into the perception of safety in prehospital emergency care settings worldwide, from either the perspective of the patients or from that of healthcare professionals.

Design: Exploratory qualitative study using focus groups in Spain.

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Objective: The aim of the study was to design and validate a new tool to measure the security perceived by witnesses of patient care and hospital transfers, after requesting urgent assistance via the "061" phone number.

Methods: This is a descriptive observational, cross-sectional, design, and validation study of a scale conducted by telephone interview. Witnesses of urgent assistance and transfers by prehospital emergency medical services in the province of Cadiz, in the south of Spain, were the subjects of study.

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The authors detail the characteristics for the sterility of drained serums placed in a mobile emergency service unit and they determine how much time they can maintain optimum conditions for the use of these serums by means of a controlled, random, triple blind clinical test in which the units studied were serums prepared by an infusion system and a three-way valve. Data were gathered during a 12 month study period. The authors designed six operating groups based on their exposure time and where they were kept.

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Objective: The topic of this research was to determine whether out-of-hospital emergency teams could make use of previously prepared saline solutions (SS). The objective was to discover the physical, chemical and sterility characteristics of previously prepared saline infusions stored in ambulances and ascertain how long they remained in optimum condition.

Method: Randomised clinical trial, triple blind, where study units consisted of saline solutions prepared with an infusion system and a three-way valve.

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