Aim: The aim of this professional practice article is to increase awareness and knowledge of chemsex among emergency medical service (EMS) clinicians.
Background: EMS clinicians can expect to be called on to respond to medical emergencies across the range and breadth of human behaviours, some of which will take them into areas they are unfamiliar with and/or that involve illegal activity. It is likely that many EMS clinicians would regard chemsex as one such area. A secretive activity, largely occurring out of sight of wider society, chemsex involves the planned use of specific drugs to enhance, prolong and sustain sexual experiences. Most chemsex is consensual, with participants engaging in it because they derive pleasure and enjoyment from the activity. Many do not regard their participation as problematic and so are highly unlikely to have previously discussed this aspect of their lives with a medical or harm-reduction professional. Engagement in chemsex does, however, carry significant risks of both mental and physical harms. When something goes wrong at an event, EMS can expect to be called to respond.In this article, chemsex scenarios are combined with literature drawn from a range of sources to explore multiple aspects of chemsex from the perspective of EMS clinicians.
Conclusion: Chemsex invokes a complex interaction between physical health, mental health, social care, addiction medicine, sexual health and criminal justice. In providing a community-based response, EMS clinicians are uniquely placed as the only element of healthcare that sees chemsex participants at the event location, often while the incident is still going on. Equipping responders with core knowledge of chemsex activities will ensure they are best able to provide a response that is knowledgeable, patient-centred and offers unconditional positive regard. Clinicians that are chemsex-aware will be in a better position to recognise and understand the drugs that may have been taken and their associated toxidrome and appreciate the significant risk of physical and mental trauma. They will also recognise they are in a unique and privileged position and feel confident to engage in harm reduction with this very high-risk and largely unseen cohort of patients.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11610538 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.29045/14784726.2024.12.9.3.63 | DOI Listing |
Prehosp Emerg Care
January 2025
Prisma Health Department of Emergency Medicine, Greenville, South Carolina.
While several studies have focused on preliminary data and outcomes associated with prehospital buprenorphine administration interventions, to date there has been little discussion of the challenges experienced during the initial implementation of a prehospital buprenorphine protocol. In this case series we examine 3 separate patient encounters with different crews, patients, and receiving emergency medicine (EM) physicians, which highlight initial challenges experienced with implementing the first prehospital buprenorphine program in a rural Appalachian County within South Carolina. In 2 cases we highlight conflicts that may require collegial intervention and education of local receiving EM physicians regarding the new prehospital protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrehosp Emerg Care
January 2025
Clinical and Research Services, ImageTrend Inc.
Objectives: Motorcycle helmets save lives and reduce serious injury after motorcycle collisions (MCC). In 2022, 18 states had laws requiring helmet use by motorcyclists aged ≥21 years. Our objective was to compare helmet use and head trauma in emergency medical services (EMS) patients involved in MCC in states with and without helmet use laws.
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January 2025
Department of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd Portland, OR 97239.
Objectives: Out-of-hospital births are associated with a 2-to 11-fold increased risk of death compared to in-hospital births and are growing. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) clinicians have limited exposure to hospital birth emergencies, and there is no standardized prehospital neonatal resuscitation curriculum. Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) guidelines are the standard of care for infants born in the United States but focuses on in-hospital births and is not easily applied to EMS.
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January 2025
Wake County Emergency Medical Services, 331 S. McDowell St, Raleigh, NC 27601.
Objectives: Buprenorphine has recently emerged as a prehospital treatment for opioid use disorder. Limited data exist regarding the implementation of prehospital buprenorphine programs. Our objective was to describe the development, deployment, lessons learned, and ongoing evolution of the Wake County EMS buprenorphine program using data from the first year following implementation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrehosp Emerg Care
January 2025
EMS Bridge, Public Health Institute, Oakland, CA.
Objectives: Opioid use disorder (OUD) remains a common cause of overdose and mortality in the United States. Emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians often interact with patients with OUD, including during or shortly after an overdose. The aim of this study was to describe the characteristics and outcomes of patients receiving prehospital buprenorphine for the treatment of opioid withdrawal in an urban EMS system.
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