Outcome study of prehospital patients signed out against medical advice by field paramedics
Autor: | James V. Dunford, Gary M. Vilke, Theodore C. Chan, Steven T. Moss, Jean Buchanan |
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Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Pediatrics Emergency Medical Services Adolescent Health Status Treatment Refusal Epidemiology Outcome Assessment Health Care Emergency medical services medicine Humans Prospective cohort study Aged Retrospective Studies Respiratory distress business.industry Incidence (epidemiology) Incidence Retrospective cohort study Middle Aged Emergency Medical Technicians Emergency medicine Emergency Medicine Observational study Female business |
Zdroj: | Annals of emergency medicine. 31(2) |
ISSN: | 0196-0644 |
Popis: | Study objective: To describe the incidence and demographic data of prehospital patients who contact paramedics by way of the 911 system, refuse transport against medical advice (AMA), then call 911 and are subsequently reevaluated by paramedics in the following 48 hours. Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational review of records using the San Diego County Quality Assurance Network database for prehospital providers. All paramedic 911 responses that made base hospital contact over a 3-month period were reviewed to identify patients who signed out AMA. The main outcome measure was to identify patients who signed out AMA and then called 911 again within 48 hours. The demographics, complaints, treatments, and dispositions of these patients are described. Results: Of 6,512 total 911 responses reviewed, 443 (7%) involved patients who signed out AMA. Of these patients, 156 cases (35.2%) were listed as trauma and 287 (64.8%) were medical, with cardiac chest pain, seizure, and respiratory distress/shortness of breath the most frequently noted medical subcategories. Fifty-one (11.5%) such patients received treatment; 34 received dextrose, 12 naloxone, 4 albuterol, and 1 a splint. Patient names were available in 5,515 of the total 6,512 responses and 431 of the 443 AMA cases, permitting computer searching of reevaluations by paramedics. Of the 431 AMA patients for whom a name was available, 10 (2%) called 911 again within 48 hours. All 10 callbacks were made for a related chief complaint, and all 10 of these patients were transported (4 admitted to hospital, 1 died en route, 1 transferred to another facility, 4 discharged from the ED). Of these 10 patients, 7 (70%) were older than 65 years, compared with 17% of all AMA patients older than 65 years. Conclusion: On the basis of our findings, patients over the age of 65 years have a propensity to recontact paramedics and should be aggressively encouraged to seek emergency medical treatment. Future prospective studies should be mounted to examine at patient outcome and to assess why patients sign out AMA after making contact with paramedics. [Moss ST, Chan TC, Buchanan J, Dunford JV, Vilke GM: Outcome study of prehospital patients signed out against medical advice by field paramedics. Ann Emerg Med February 1998;31:247-250.] |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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