Aim: Use of a physician-manned prehospital emergency medical service (EMS) has recently become widespread in Japan. Understanding the epidemiology of critically ill patients is essential for planning national and regional physician-manned prehospital EMS systems. However, current knowledge on patients receiving physician-manned prehospital EMS is sparse. The present study aimed to determine the clinical features of critically ill patients with and without physician-manned prehospital EMS, using a national inpatient database in Japan.
Methods: Using the Japanese Diagnosis Procedure Combination inpatient database, we identified all hospitalized patients transported to tertiary emergency centers by physician-manned EMS or EMS without a physician from April 2014 to March 2015. We collected data on patient characteristics, in-hospital mortality, admission diagnoses, advanced life support interventions, and incidence of critical illnesses.
Results: We identified 497,911 hospitalized patients transported to tertiary emergency centers by EMS. Of these, 15,507 (3%) patients were hospitalized by physician-manned EMS. The majority of admission diagnoses in the physician-manned EMS group were classified "diseases of the circulatory system" (45%) and "injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes" (34%). The rates of in-hospital mortality, advanced life support interventions, and critical illnesses in the physician-manned EMS group were 22%, 51%, and 53%, respectively. The median incidences of hospitalized patients by physician-manned EMS, advanced life support interventions, and critical illnesses were 12, 137, and 205 per 100,000 persons per year in facilities with physician-manned EMS, respectively.
Conclusion: Our study indicates that physician-manned EMS is dispatched to a relatively small proportion of critically ill patients in Japan.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ams2.400 | DOI Listing |
Aim: Use of a physician-manned prehospital emergency medical service (EMS) has recently become widespread in Japan. Understanding the epidemiology of critically ill patients is essential for planning national and regional physician-manned prehospital EMS systems. However, current knowledge on patients receiving physician-manned prehospital EMS is sparse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Cardiol
January 2015
Department of Cardiology, Nykøbing Falster Hospital, Denmark.
Adequate health care is increasingly dependent on prehospital systems and cardiovascular (CV) disease remains the most common cause for hospital admission. However the prevalence of CV dispatches of emergency medical services (EMS) is not well reported and survival data described in clinical trials and registries are subject to selection biases. We aimed to describe the prevalence and prognosis of acute CV disease and the effect of invasive treatment, in an unselected and consecutive prehospital cohort of 3,410 patients calling the national emergency telephone number from 2005 to 2008 with follow-up in 2013.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Severely poisoned patients can benefit from intensive and specific treatments. Emergency medical services (EMS) may therefore play a crucial role by matching prehospital care and hospital referral to the severity of poisoned patients. Our aim was to investigate EMS accuracy in this condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med
August 2014
Department of Anaesthesiology, Regensburg University Medical Center, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, Regensburg, 93053, Germany.
Background: The Amberg-Schwandorf Algorithm for Primary Triage (ASAV) is a novel primary triage concept specifically for physician manned emergency medical services (EMS) systems. In this study, we determined the diagnostic reliability and the time requirements of ASAV triage.
Methods: Seven hundred eighty triage runs performed by 76 trained EMS providers of varying professional qualification were included into the study.
Dan Med J
November 2013
Anæstesi- og operationsafdelingen, Regionshospitalet Viborg, Heibergs Allé 4, 8800 Viborg, Denmark.
Introduction: A formalized trauma response team is designed to optimize the quality and progress of patient care for severely injured patients in order to reduce mortality and morbidity. The goal of this study was to determine over- and undertriage and to evaluate if a physician-manned pre-hospital response (MD-EMS) would reduce overtriage. Overtriage was defined as the process of over-estimating the level of injury sustained by an individual.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!