Abstract

BackgroundSufficient analgesia is an obligation, but oligoanalgesia (NRS> 3) is frequently observed prehospitally. Potent analgesics may cause severe adverse events. Thus, analgesia in the helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) setting is challenging. Adequacy, efficacy and administration safety of potent analgesics pertaining to injured patients in HEMS were analysed.MethodsObservational study evaluating data from 14 year-round physician-staffed helicopter bases in Austria in a 12-year timeframe.ResultsOverall, 47,985 (34.3%) patients received analgesics, 26,059 of whom were adult patients, injured and not mechanically ventilated on site. Main drugs administered were opioids (n=20,051; 76.9%), esketamine (n=9082; 34.9%), metamizole (n=798; 3.1%) and NSAIDs (n=483; 1.9%). Monotherapy with opioids or esketamine was the most common regimen (n=21,743; 83.4%), while opioids together with esketamine (n= 3591; 13.8%) or metamizole (n=369; 1.4%) were the most common combinations. Females received opioids less frequently than did males (n=6038; 74.5% vs. n=14,013; 78.1%; p< 0.001). Pain relief was often sufficient (> 95%), but females more often had moderate to severe pain on arrival in hospital (n=34; 5.0% vs. n=59; 3.2%; p=0.043). Administration of potent analgesics was safe, as indicated by MEES, SpO2 and respiratory rates. On 10% of all missions, clinical patient assessment was deemed sufficient by HEMS physicians and monitoring was spared.ConclusionsOpioids and esketamine alone or in combination were the analgesics of choice in physician-staffed HEMS in Austria. Analgesia was often sufficient, but females more than males suffered from oligoanalgesia on hospital arrival. Administration safety was high, justifying liberal use of potent analgesics in physician-staffed HEMS.

Highlights

  • Providing sufficient analgesia in the challenging prehospital emergency setting is an ethical obligation and of clinical relevance [1]

  • The aim of this study was to assess analgesia in patients treated by helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) physicians over a 12-year timeframe in Austria

  • Opioids were administered in 78.1%, esketamine in 34.2%; in females, opioids were administered in 74.5% (p< 0.001), esketamine in 36.3% (p= 0.002) of all cases (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Providing sufficient analgesia in the challenging prehospital emergency setting is an ethical obligation and of clinical relevance [1]. Able to relieve intense pain, can result in severe adverse events (e.g. respiratory or circulatory depression, hallucination or agitation). Sufficient analgesia is an obligation, but oligoanalgesia (NRS> 3) is frequently observed prehospitally. Potent analgesics may cause severe adverse events. Analgesia in the helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) setting is challenging. Efficacy and administration safety of potent analgesics pertaining to injured patients in HEMS were analysed

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