| Literature DB >> 24580744 |
John Taylor1, Kyle McLaughlin, Andrew McRae, Eddy Lang, Andrew Anton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Advances in ultrasound imaging technology have made it more accessible to prehospital providers. Little is known about how ultrasound is being used in the prehospital environment and we suspect that it is not widely used in North America at this time. We believe that EMS system characteristics such as provider training, system size, population served, and type of transport will be associated with use or non-use of ultrasound. Our study objective was to describe the current use of prehospital ultrasound in North America.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24580744 PMCID: PMC3941255 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-14-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Characteristics of EMS services
| | |
| United States | 95.1% (92.7, 97.5) |
| Canada | 4.9% (2.5, 7.3) |
| | |
| Public | 50.7% (44.9, 56.5) |
| Private | 24.4% (19.4, 29.4) |
| Mixture of public and private | 24.9% (19.9, 29.9) |
| | |
| Urban | 30.2% (25.1, 35.3) |
| Rural | 15.3% (11.3, 19.3) |
| Mixture of urban and rural | 54.5% (49, 60) |
| | |
| 0 – 9 999 | 3.2% (1.2, 5.2) |
| 10 000 – 99 999 | 23.9% (19.2, 28.6) |
| 100 000 – 999 999 | 47.3% (41.8, 52.8) |
| >1 000 000 | 25.7% (20.9, 30.5) |
| | |
| Ground transport | 95% (92.6, 97.4) |
| Helicopter air transport | 36.5% (31.2, 41.8) |
| Fixed, wing air transport | 8.6% (5.5, 8.6) |
| | |
| 0-10 min | 29.4% (24.3, 34.5) |
| 10-20 min | 52% (46.5, 57.5) |
| 20-30 min | 11.3% (7.8, 14.8) |
| 30-60 min | 7.2% (4.3, 10.1) |
| >60 min | 0.0% |
| | |
| 0-10 min | 13.6% (9.8, 17.4) |
| 10-20 min | 38.5% (33.1, 43.9) |
| 20-30 min | 19.9% (15.5, 24.3) |
| 30-60 min | 16.7% (12.6, 16.7) |
| >60 min | 11.3% (7.8, 14.8) |
| | |
| NREMT Basic or equivalent | 3.6% (1.5, 5.7) |
| NREMT Intermediate or equivalent | 1.4% (0.1, 2.9) |
| NREMT Paramedic or equivalent | 67.9% (62.7, 73.1) |
| NREMT Paramedic with additional training in critical care or registered nurses with critical care training | 24.9% (20.1, 29.7) |
| Physician | 2.3% (0.6-4.0) |
The barriers EMS Medical directors perceive to implementing prehospital ultrasound n = 198
| Equipment cost | 177 | 89.4% (85.7-93.1) |
| Training costs | 146 | 73.7% (68.4-79) |
| Challenges in training | 106 | 53.5% (47.5-59.5) |
| Transport times | 95 | 48% (42-54) |
| Concerns about delaying time to definitive care | 90 | 45.5% (39.5-51.5) |
| Ultrasound is beyond the scope of practice of providers | 76 | 38.4% (32.6-44.2) |
| Lack of evidence | 76 | 38.4% (32.6-44.2) |
| Approval by EMS administration | 25 | 12.6% (8.6-16.6) |
| Buy-in by other EMS medical directors | 21 | 10.6% (6.9-14.3) |
| Regulatory factors | 29 | 14.6% (10.4-18.8) |
Factors that would facilitate implementation of prehospital ultrasound among to EMS medical directors not currently using ultrasound
| Studies demonstrating improvement in patient mortality | 125 | 71.8% (65.9-77.7) |
| Studies demonstrating improvement in patient morbidity | 127 | 73.0% (67.2-78.8) |
| Studies on sensitivity and specificity of ultrasound used by paramedic operators | 97 | 55.7% (49.2-62.2) |
| Studies on the effect of prehospital ultrasound on transport time | 92 | 52.9% (46.4-59.4) |
| Studies about the potential indications for prehospital ultrasound | 92 | 52.9% (46.4-59.4) |
| Case studies demonstrating examples of prehospital ultrasound and patient outcomes | 45 | 25.9% (20.2-31.6) |
| | | |
| Decreased cost | 115 | 69.7% (63.5-75.9) |
| Practice guidelines including prehospital ultrasound | 109 | 66.1% (59.7-72.5) |
| Standardized training available for EMS staff | 96 | 58.2% (51.5-64.9) |
| Policy statements endorsing ultrasound | 74 | 44.8% (38.1-51.5) |