| Literature DB >> 16984647 |
Deborah Shaw1, Jane V Dyas, Jo Middlemass, Anne Spaight, Maureen Briggs, Sarah Christopher, A Niroshan Siriwardena.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Refusal by the patient to travel after calling an emergency ambulance may lead to a preventable waste of scarce resources if it can be shown that an alternative more appropriate response could be employed. A greater understanding is required of the reasons behind 'refusal to travel' (RTT) in order to find appropriate solutions to address this issue. We sought to investigate the reasons why patients refuse to travel following emergency call-out in a rural county.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16984647 PMCID: PMC1592119 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-6-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Data collection headings used to organise data from the AS34 (RTT form) and AS9 (patient record) developed in the pilot study
| Date of Incident and job number | Unique identifier for every emergency call. Patient details were omitted from the research data but the unique identifier ensured that the researchers were able to trace the original records. |
| Vehicle call sign | 'Cross check' to ensure that in cases which involved multiple patients under the same identifier, for instance in the case of a road traffic collision, or where a patient name had not been recorded or in cases where the scanning system used to store information onto the record database misread job numbers leading to two records with the same identifier being stored, the correct record could be identified. |
| Presenting condition | The presenting condition was the information recorded in the 'chief complaint' box (on AS9) |
| Immediate treatment given | Any treatment that was recorded on the AS9 as being provided to the patient by the ambulance clinician on scene. |
| Refusal against advice | Instances where the clinician has explicitly noted on the AS 34 or AS 9 that the patient had 'refused to travel' against advice. |
| Clinical reason for non-transportation where stated | Where the reason, as recorded by the clinician for non-transportation, suggested that the injury or condition did not require hospital treatment/there was no injury. This information was gathered from the reasons recorded on the AS34 and/or the free text history box on the AS9. |
| Patient reason for refusal where stated | This heading was used to note the reasons for non-transportation where they were explicitly recorded as originating from the patient. This information was gathered from the AS 34 and/or the AS 9. |
Presenting themes, conditions and prevalence
| Named Conditions (includes): | 112 |
| | 41 |
| | 25 |
| | 15 |
| | 10 |
| | 9 |
| | 4 |
| | 3 |
| | 3 |
| | 1 |
| | 1 |
| Collapse | 31 |
| Non-specifically unwell | 10 |
| Falls | 131 |
| General difficulty with mobility | 3 |
| RTA | 47 |
| Minor Injury – non-fall | 23 |
| Assault | 13 |
| Fire call | 2 |
| Entrapment – non-RTA | 1 |
| Ingested foreign object | 1 |
Type of immediate management given to patients
*All other categories less than 5%
Patients' stated reasons for refusing to travel
Clinicians' stated reasons for patients 'refusing to travel'
*The themes and categories were identified from the data and agreed by the research group