Abstract

BackgroundThe requirement concerning formal education for emergency medical dispatcher (EMD) is debated and varies, both nationally and internationally. There are few studies on the outcomes of emergency medical dispatching in relation to professional background. This study aimed to compare calls handled by an EMD with and without support by a registered nurse (RN), with respect to priority level, accuracy, and medical condition.MethodsA retrospective observational study, performed on registry data from specific regions during 2015. The ambulance personnel’s first assessment of the priority level and medical condition was used as the reference standard. Outcomes were: the proportion of calls dispatched with a priority in concordance with the ambulance personnel’s assessment; over- and undertriage; the proportion of most adverse over- and undertriage; sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for each of the ambulance priorities; proportion of calls dispatched with a medical condition in concordance with the ambulance personnel’s assessment. Proportions were reported with 95% confidence intervals. χ2-test was used for comparisons. P-levels < 0.05 were regarded as significant.ResultsA total of 25,025 calls were included (EMD n = 23,723, EMD + RN n = 1302). Analyses relating to priority and medical condition were performed on 23,503 and 21,881 calls, respectively. A dispatched priority in concordance with the ambulance personnel’s assessment were: EMD n = 11,319 (50.7%) and EMD + RN n = 481 (41.5%) (p < 0.01). The proportion of overtriage was equal for both groups: EMD n = 5904, EMD + RN n = 306, (26.4%) p = 0.25). The proportion of undertriage for each group was: EMD n = 5122 (22.9%) and EMD + RN n = 371 (32.0%) (p < 0.01). Sensitivity for the most urgent priority was 54.6% for EMD, compared to 29.6% for EMD + RN (p < 0.01), and specificity was 67.3% and 84.8% (p < 0.01) respectively. A dispatched medical condition in concordance with the ambulance personnel’s assessment were: EMD n = 13,785 (66.4%) and EMD + RN n = 697 (62.2%) (p = 0.01).ConclusionsA higher precision of emergency medical dispatching was not observed when the EMD was supported by an RN. How patient safety is affected by the observed divergence in dispatched priorities is an area for future research.

Highlights

  • The requirement concerning formal education for emergency medical dispatcher (EMD) is debated and varies, both nationally and internationally

  • Analyses relating to priority were performed on calls with complete and corresponding data on dispatched priority (Swedish The Swedish Index to Emergency Medical Assistance (Index) Priority 1–3) and assessment by ambulance personnel (RETTS Red/Orange/Yellow/ Green)

  • Statistical analysis Calls handled only by an EMD and calls when an registered nurse (RN) supported the EMD (EMD + RN) were compared with respect to the following: the proportion of calls dispatched with a priority in concordance with the ambulance assessment; the proportion of over- and undertriage; the proportion of most adverse over- and undertriage; sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for each of the ambulance priorities (RETTS Red/ Orange, Yellow and Green); proportion of calls dispatched with a medical condition in concordance with the ambulance personnel’s assessment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The requirement concerning formal education for emergency medical dispatcher (EMD) is debated and varies, both nationally and internationally. This study aimed to compare calls handled by an EMD with and without support by a registered nurse (RN), with respect to priority level, accuracy, and medical condition. The requirements for formal education for EMDs vary among emergency medical services both nationally and internationally [3,4,5,6,7], and few studies have investigated either the optimal education for an EMD [8,9,10] or the relationship between educational and professional backgrounds of EMDs and the outcomes of emergency medical dispatching [11,12,13]. The aim of the current study was to compare calls handled by an EMD with and without RN support with respect to priority level, accuracy, and medical condition

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call