Abstract

Aim To identify the number of incidents, over a 1-year period in a single UK Ambulance Service Trust, where patients attended by Hazardous Area Response Team (HART) paramedics where eligible to receive Pre-hospital Blood Products (PHBP) but did not due to the unavailability of a suitably trained clinician. Methods This was a Service Evaluation using a three-stage method of filtering data to reduce bias and improve accuracy when identifying eligible cases. These stages consisted of an initial data request, a peer review filtering stage and then finally an Expert Consensus Panel review of cases to determine whether PHBP should have been administered. Results The consensus group considered 14 cases that would have ‘Likely’ or ‘Certainly’ have received PHBP if a suitably trained clinician was available on scene. Twelve cases involved a traumatic cause whilst the remaining two were medical. Similarly, 12 cases involved patients with spontaneous circulation whilst two patients had no pulse. South Western Ambulance Service Foundation Trust (SWASFT) Bristol HART attended eight and Exeter HART six of these cases. Conclusion This study reveals that across the South West of England, there were a number of patients, being attended by HART, who may potentially benefit from PHBP but are not receiving this intervention due to the unavailability of a suitably trained clinician. This could be far more in the event of a multi or mass-casualty event. HART paramedic access to PHBPs would enable more patients to access a potentially lifesaving treatment and contribute to narrowing the care gap identified in the Manchester Arena Inquiry. The authors recommend that a local pilot trial is undertaken to explore whether a HART PHBP service is feasible, sustainable, cost-effective, appropriate, and safe.

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