Abstract

ObjectiveThe epidemiology accompanying helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) transport has evolved as agencies have matured and become integrated into regionalized health systems, as evidenced primarily by nationwide systems in Europe. System-level congruence between Europe and the United States, where HEMS is geographically fragmentary, is unclear. In this study, we provide a temporal, epidemiologic characterization of the largest standardized private, nonprofit HEMS system in the United States, STAT MedEvac. MethodsWe obtained comprehensive timing, procedure, and vital signs data from STAT MedEvac prehospital electronic patient care records for all adult patients transported to UPMC Health System hospitals in the period of January 2012 through October 2021. We linked these data with hospital electronic health records available through June 2018 to establish length of stay and vital status at discharge. ResultsWe studied 90,960 transports and matched 62.8% (n = 57,128) to the electronic health record. The average patient age was 58.6 years ( 19 years), and most were male (57.9%). The majority of cases were interfacility transports (77.6%), and the most common general medical category was nontrauma (72.7%). Sixty-one percent of all patients received a prehospital intervention. Overall, hospital mortality was 15%, and the average hospital length of stay (LOS) was 8.8 days ( 10.0 days). Observed trends over time included increases in nontrauma transports, level of severity, and in-hospital mortality. In multivariable models, case severity and medical category correlated with the outcomes of mortality and LOS. ConclusionIn the largest standardized nonprofit HEMS system in the United States, patient mortality and hospital LOS increased over time, whereas the proportion of trauma patients and scene runs decreased.

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