View clinical trials related to Emergency Medical Services.
Filter by:Community First Responders (CFRs) are trained members of the public, lay people or off-duty healthcare staff who volunteer to provide first aid. CFRs help ambulance services to provide care for people having health emergencies, from falls to road accidents to heart attacks, at home or in public places. CFRs are particularly important in rural areas where it is more difficult to provide or access emergency care, and where they are an important part of the care workforce. CFRs are broadly perceived to be positive, however evidence is needed about how they contribute to rural health services, which patients/conditions they attend, what care they provide, how effective they are and at what cost, how they are perceived by patients and other health workers, and how they could be developed to improve care for rural communities. The investigators aim to develop recommendations for rural CFRs, by exploring their contribution to rural care, evaluating their value for money, understanding experiences and views of patients, CFRs and other healthcare staff, and exploring the potential for CFRs to provide new services.
The study investigators will recruit paramedics in many Emergency Medical Services (EMS) in Switzerland to prepare direct intravenous (IV) emergency drugs during a standardized simulation-based pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest scenario. According to randomization, each paramedic will be asked to prepare sequentially 4 IV emergency drugs (epinephrine, midazolam, dextrose 10%, sodium bicarbonate 4.2%) following either their current conventional methods or by the aim of a mobile device app. This app is designed to support drug preparation at pediatric dosages. In a previous multicenter randomized trial with nurses, the investigators reported the ability of this app to significantly reduce in-hospital continuous infusion medication error rates and drug preparation time compared to conventional preparation methods during simulation-based resuscitations. In this trial, the aim was to assess this app during pediatric out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation with paramedics.
SatCare is a randomised controlled trial involving rapid standardised ultrasound assessment of patients with shock, major trauma, abdominal pain, chest pain or breathlessness in emergency ambulances. The scans will take less than 5 minutes and be transmitted to a hospital-based expert for review, providing support and instructions for optimal prehospital care. Five Highland Scottish Ambulance Service ambulances covering areas more than 30 minutes from Raigmore Hospital, Inverness, UK, will be equipped with an ultrasound machine (M-Turbo, FujiFilm Sonosite) and satellite transmission system plus webcam, and will be deployed in real emergency situations. When dispatched to a potentially eligible patient, the attending paramedic will contact Raigmore Hospital's emergency department to check the availability of an emergency medicine specialist and obtain study group allocation (ultrasound with enhanced telecommunications plus usual care versus usual care alone). Following verbal consent from the patient, trained paramedics will perform the condition-specific scan protocol in the ambulance at the incident site, and transmit the recordings and patient video via satellite to the emergency department for specialist analysis. The consultant will give advice on patient management via standard ambulance communications systems while it is en route to the hospital. The remotely supported prehospital ultrasound implementation will be examined in terms of its delivery and functioning. An economic evaluation will compare its use with care as usual for eligible patients transported by ambulance, modelling the costs and benefits of this service expansion and determining optimum use. It is hoped that the results, anticipated to be available in 2019, will provide an evidence base for the use of prehospital ultrasound for emergency care.
This is a staged registry study of early treatment strategy management of acute aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage(aSAH) among different economic development levels areas in China. First stage, the study will investigate and register the basic information of emergency treatment management for the acute aSAH in 20 different grade centers located in different economic levels districts including Northeast part, Northern, Eastern, South-central, Northwest, Southwest and Qinghai-Tibet of China. Comparing the the outcome of acute aSAH to find the critical factors to affect it by statistical analysis. Then,the investigators will offer some suggestions to adjust the measures to improve the efficacy of emergency medical service for acute SAH. Second stage, to evaluate the outcome after applying the new suggestion of self-control methods. The investigators hypothesis that there is an appropriate green pathway in different districts to shorten the rescuing time, improve the curative effects.
Hypothesis: 'Transport PLUS,' a low cost, easily generalizable intervention performed by Emergency Medical Technicians while transporting a patient home from the hospital, can improve transitions of care and improve patient safety following hospitalization as measured by decreased rates of falls and reduced rates of return to the hospital.
The Swiss Emergency Triage Scale (SETS) in used for triage in emergency departments in Switzerland, France and Belgium. No validated triage scale is actually used by Emergency Medical Service (EMS) providers. The objective of this project is to evaluate the reliability and performance of triage by EMS providers with the SETS.
The ProDEms-trial focuses on nurses and ambulance drivers working in prehospital care, taking care on the one hand of patients suffering from time-sensitive critical conditions like STEMI, acute stroke or severe traumatic brain injury, and on the other hand of patients whose lives are not in immediate danger but suffer from acute exacerbation of chronic conditions or suffer from acute pain. In the current study the investigators will use a multistage approach to test the hypothesis whether the use of a CDSS in prehospital emergency care will: 1. Improve protocol adherence, 2. Reduce emergency department length of stay, 3. Improves diagnostic accuracy; without impeding the workflow of the prehospital team or impairing patient safety.
The goals of this study are to identify outcome indicators of optimal care for brain injury patients, including pre-hospital care, prompt delivery to neurosurgical care and access to early rehabilitation services. Nova Scotia's centralized Neurosurgical services and integrated provincial Emergency Health Services provide a rich opportunity to construct a cohesive, integrated data management system. This system will allow us to answer important research questions related to the outcomes, care and prevention of brain trauma. Retrospective data collection The retrospective arm of the BTO study has created full data sets and care pathways from multiple sources covering the continuum of brain trauma care. Investigators continue to analyze this large amount of data and prepare it for publication. Prospective data Collection Patients with a major head injury (initial GCS 3-12), have been considered for enrollment in the BTO study.The prospective arm of the BTO study has 52 patients enrolled. Screening and Enrollment was complete on June 30, 2007. These patients are participating in long term follow up at 6, 12 and 24 months post injury for assessment of qualitative and quantitative outcomes. Completion of patient follow up will be in June 2009.
Homelessness is a significant problem in Canada, and many homeless people will seek routine care in the Emergency Department (ED) as a result of barriers to access. There is a paucity of information in the literature concerning the attitudes of health care workers towards homeless patients in the ED setting, although there is ample reason to believe that these attitudes may be suboptimal. In the absence of formal teaching regarding issues of homelessness, medical students have been shown to develop increasingly negative attitudes towards this vulnerable population. It is therefore important to better delineate the attitudes of ED physicians towards homeless persons and to develop an emergency medicine curriculum that helps sensitize physicians to the needs of this already disadvantaged population.