Articles: emergency-medical-services.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Effect of first-responder automated defibrillation on time to therapeutic interventions during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The Multicenter High Dose Epinephrine Study Group.
The effect of automated defibrillation provided by basic emergency medical technician (EMT) first-responder units on the time intervals to other critical interventions in the management of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests is unknown. The purpose of this study was to define and compare elapsed time intervals to basic CPR, paramedic arrival, initial countershock, endotracheal intubation, IV access, and initial adrenergic drug therapy in first-responder automated defibrillation/paramedic versus basic EMT/paramedic emergency medical services systems. ⋯ First-responder automated defibrillation/paramedic systems provide not only shorter times to initial countershock, as compared with basic EMT/paramedic systems, but by having delegated initial countershock to first-responders, they also allow for significantly shorter times from paramedic arrival to IV access, endotracheal intubation, and initial adrenergic drug therapy interventions.
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Prehosp Disaster Med · Jan 1993
Multicenter StudyThe prehospital use of nitroglycerin according to standing medical orders in an urban EMS system.
The purposes of this study are to quantify the use of nitroglycerin (NTG) in prehospital care, to detect deviations from the Standing Medical Orders (SMO), to determine the effectiveness of its administration, and the incidence of clinically significant adverse reactions (hypotension, bradycardia). ⋯ In this EMS system, NTG is under-utilized based on the indications delineated by this system's SMOs. Reassessment is documented infrequently, but when completed, clinically significant adverse reactions are rare. Since the incidence of hypotension and bradycardia are rare, the inability to establish an IV line should not preclude the administration of NTG.
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American heart journal · Jan 1991
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialPrehospital diagnosis and treatment of acute myocardial infarction: a north-south perspective. The Cincinnati Heart Project and the Nashville Prehospital TPA Trial.
Intravenous thrombolytic therapy improves left ventricular function and reduces mortality in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). In European and Middle Eastern trials, prehospital delivery of thrombolytic agents by physician-directed mobile intensive care units has been successful. This report describes two independently conceived and performed trials that used cellular telephone transmission of 12-lead ECGs to deliver recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (r-tPA) in the field to patients with AMI. ⋯ Combining the Nashville and Cincinnati experiences, only 27 of 562 total patients with chest pain (4.8%) were candidates for prehospital thrombolysis. We conclude that few patients evaluated in the prehospital setting are actual candidates for thrombolytic therapy. Substantial allocation of financial and human resources for prehospital delivery of intravenous thrombolytic therapy does not appear warranted.
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Preventable trauma deaths in The Netherlands--a prospective multicenter study.
The data of all trauma fatalities occurring in 12 Dutch hospitals during a period of 1 year were reviewed for management errors and preventable deaths by a panel of five surgeons trained in trauma care. Management errors occurred in 38% of the fatalities. There was a significantly higher percentage of management errors in small general hospitals (72%) than in large general (29%) and in university hospitals (34%). ⋯ A significantly higher preventable death rate occurred in small general hospitals (48%), than in large general (14%) and university hospitals (19%). From these results, it can be concluded that management errors and preventable deaths are general phenomena occurring in any hospital. However, they occur significantly more frequently in hospitals not especially equipped to manage severely injured patients.