| Literature DB >> 25086749 |
Deborah Shaw1, Aloysius Niroshan Siriwardena.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute asthma is a common reason for patients to seek care from ambulance services. Although better care of acute asthma can prevent avoidable morbidity and deaths, there has been little research into ambulance clinicians' adherence to national guidelines for asthma assessment and management and how this might be improved. Our research aim was to explore paramedics' attitudes, perceptions and beliefs about prehospital management of asthma, to identify barriers and facilitators to guideline adherence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25086749 PMCID: PMC4125344 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-14-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
JRCALC guidelines for asthma 2006[6]
| Assess ABCD (airway, breathing, circulation, disability) for severity of asthma. | - Correct ABCD. |
| Check PEFR if practicable. | - Administer high dose oxygen. |
| Monitor ECG and pulse oximetry. | - Commence transfer to definitive care. |
| Reassess to measure improvement in peak flow or chest air entry. | - Administer salbutamol via oxygen driven nebuliser at 6-8l/minute. |
| | - In acute or severe life threatening cases add ipratropium bromide via nebuliser. |
| | - Obtain intravenous access if possible. |
| | - If no clinical improvement after 5–10 minutes repeat salbutamol nebuliser, consider continuous nebulised salbutamol and add ipratropium bromide nebuliser if not given previously. |
| | - Administer hydrocortisone intravenously. |
| | In life threatening asthma: |
| Administer adrenaline intramuscularly. |
PEFR = Peak Expiratory Flow Rate; ECG = Electrocardiograph.
Participant characteristics
| 9 | 5 | 3 | |
| 2 female | 3 female | 1 female | |
| 7 male | 2 male | 2 male | |
| 5 to 35 | 9 to 14 | 2 to 16 | |
| 7 PTLs | | | |
| 1 OSM | 5 paramedics | 2 CPs | |
| 1 OSM/CP | 1 Paramedic |
PTL = paramedic team leader; OSM - operational senior manager, CP = community paramedic.