1 / 19

Pre-hospital emergency care - where now? Prof. Gerard Bury Department of General Practice Vice-Chairman

Pre-hospital emergency care - where now? Prof. Gerard Bury Department of General Practice Vice-Chairman University College Dublin Pre-Hospital Emergency Care Council. Pre-hospital emergency care. Drivers for change Comhairle - Report of the Committee on A&E Services

Anita
Télécharger la présentation

Pre-hospital emergency care - where now? Prof. Gerard Bury Department of General Practice Vice-Chairman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pre-hospital emergency care - where now? Prof. Gerard Bury Department of General Practice Vice-Chairman University College Dublin Pre-Hospital Emergency CareCouncil

  2. Pre-hospital emergency care Drivers for change • Comhairle - Report of the Committee on A&E Services Close pre-hospital and hospital links • Improved postgraduate training for doctors and nurses Structured, multidisciplinary training • National Health Strategy Consultant delivered services • Medical Council Interim Criteria for A&E Departments

  3. Pre-hospital emergency care Where now? • Ambulance service integration into the health system • Regionalisation of A&E services • Third level training of EMTs • Advanced care provision by EMTs • GP co-ops • ICT – new medical technology • Professionalisation, competence assurance and evidence based practice for pre-hospital care

  4. Pre-hospital emergency care Scenario 1 • 49 year old woman collapses in city centre flat, Dublin 8 • Initial chest pain, then LOC • Niece phones 999 • Two major hospitals within three miles • Issues Dispatch Traffic Triage First responders Pre-arrival instructions

  5. Pre-hospital emergency care Scenario 2 • Two car RTA between Clifden and Leenane, Co. Galway • Three people are injured • Clifden and Castlebar WHB ambulances respond • Issues Response times 15mins/30 mins Retrieval time 1 hour+ Local District Hospital GP response

  6. Pre-hospital emergency care Ambulance Services response times • 1 week national census of 999 calls: 3436 calls • 73% emergency, 24% rural • At best, 47% of emergencies had a response in 8 minutes • At worst, 10% of emergencies had a response in 8 minutes Breen N, Woods J, Bury G, Murphy A, Brazier H. A national census of ambulance response times to emergency calls in Ireland. JAEM 2000;17:392

  7. Pre-hospital emergency care Spatial analysis of RTAs & ambulance service responses 1 • NWHB, WHB study by NUIG and consultants: 1996-2000 • 5550 accidents • 420 deaths • 1926 serious injuries • 7351 minor injuries Moore D, Murphy A. Spatial analysis of road traaffic accidents in the Western and North Western Health Boards. NUIG, 2002

  8. Pre-hospital emergency care Spatial analysis 2

  9. Pre-hospital emergency care Spatial analysis 3 WHB • 17% of fatalities (26% at night) , 17% of serious injuries (25% at night) not reached within 25 minutes • 27% of fatalities can’t reach hospital within an hour NWHB • 5% of fatalities (9% at night), 5% of serious injuries (8% at night) not reached within 25 minutes • 31% of fatalities can’t reach hospital within an hour

  10. Pre-hospital emergency care Spatial analysis 4: conclusions • ‘Golden hour’ care – not by hospitals • First responders role – during ambulance response • Long retrieval times – extended care skills • Use Regional EDs – additional retrieval time • Integrated care: AS, EDs, GPs, PHNs, 1st Responders…

  11. Pre-hospital emergency care EMT training • PHECC registration: new entrant & conversion training • Diploma in EMT (UCD) • Standard Operational Procedures • EMT-A training – 2003

  12. Pre-hospital emergency care EMT training development • Audit/QA/QI • CME • Competence Assurance • Primary degree training

  13. Pre-hospital emergency care EMT-Advanced training • Protocol driven carers – AOPs • ACLS provision, fluid replacement, MIMMS trained • Some advanced paeds, obs care • Extended care skills

  14. Pre-hospital emergency care EMT-A development • Dispatch/triage • Operational deployment • Further development

  15. Pre-hospital emergency care Service developments • Regionalisation of ED services: welcome but implications+ • Appropriate selection of cases NB • Retrieval and extended care NB • Bypass of some centres (for some problems?) • Integrated responses with GPs, PHNs, Fire & Police… • Audit

  16. Pre-hospital emergency care Scenario 1 • Prioritised dispatch, PAI, community defib scheme, 12 lead telemetry, direct access to CPAU Scenario 2 • GP response, prioritised EMT-A response, trauma team en route, bypass DGH, team care at UCHG

  17. Pre-hospital emergency care Conclusions • Multi-sectoral developments in pre-hospital care • EMT/Ambulance Services developments in training, deployment and services • Dispatch • Teamwork • Audit and evidence!

  18. Pre-hospital emergency care Effectiveness of pre-hospital trauma care Cochrane Injuries Group/WHO – Jan 01 • Reviews of: Early fluid administration Hypertonic versus isotonic resuscitation Spinal immobilisation Advanced versus basic life support • No clear evidence of benefit Bunn F, Kwan I, Roberts I, Wentz R. Effectiveness of pre-hospital trauma care. Cochrane Injuries Group, 2001

  19. Pre-hospital emergency care Cochrane Review conclusions • These results highlight the neglect of injury as a global health issue • Injury research is unfunded and has little good quality research even in widely practised areas • There are widespread social, health and economic consequences

More Related