| Literature DB >> 28186950 |
Adam J Noble1, Darlene Snape1, Steve Goodacre2, Mike Jackson3, Frances C Sherratt1, Mike Pearson4,5, Anthony Marson4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The UK ambulance service is expected to now manage more patients in the community and avoid unnecessary transportations to hospital emergency departments (ED). Most people it attends who have experienced seizures have established epilepsy, have experienced uncomplicated seizures and so do not require the full facilities of an ED. Despite this, most are transported there. To understand why, we explored paramedics' experiences of managing seizures. DESIGN ANDEntities:
Keywords: ACCIDENT & EMERGENCY MEDICINE; EDUCATION & TRAINING (see Medical Education & Training); QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28186950 PMCID: PMC5128771 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Overview of 2016 JRCALC19 national guidance regarding who should and should not be transported to emergency department
| Guidance | |
|---|---|
| Transfer to further care |
Patients suffering from serious convulsions (≥3 in an hour) Patients suffering from eclamptic convulsions Patients suffering their first convulsion Difficulties monitoring the patient's condition |
| Non-conveyance | Only consider leaving a patient at home who makes a fully recovery following a convulsion if they are known to suffer from epilepsy, and can be supervised adequatelyFor these patients:
Measure and record vital signed with explanation given to the patient Advise patients/carer to contact GP if patient feels generally unwell or call ‘999’ if there are repeated convulsions Document reasons for decision and this must be signed by patient and/or carer Provide an information leaflet Ensure contact is made with the patient's GP Consider referral to local epilepsy service for review/ follow-up. |
GP, general practitioner; JRCALC, Joint Royal Colleges Ambulance Liaison Committee.
Figure 1Paramedic Pathfinder tool for medical patients (reproduced with permission of North West Ambulance Service). ABCD, airway, breathing, circulation, disability; PHEW, prehospital warning score; PR, perirectal; UCC, urgent care centre; ED, emergency department.
Overview of sections of interview topic guide relevant to this current report and interviewer
| Following a brief introduction and the participant being asked about their background and role, they were asked about their views of and experiences of managing seizures. The main themes relevant to this current report with examples of prompts are given below: | |
|---|---|
| Theme | Example questions |
| Perceptions of challenges faced when managing seizure |
What are the main challenges you perceive ambulance crews face in managing seizures? What factors influence care-decisions? Why? What sort of confidence do you/paramedics have in managing seizures? What accounts for this? |
| Discharge options for persons who did not need ED |
What options are available when a person does not need to be conveyed to ED? What are your experiences and views of using and accessing these? |
| Potential strengths/weakness in relation to support offered to crews |
In what way are paramedics supported in their clinical decision-making by their organisation (eg, on-scene/after-scene support/protocols/guidance)? What are your experiences/views of these? |
ED, emergency department.
Characteristics of the different regional ambulance services operating within England
| Service | Population covered* | Square miles covered* | Number of qualified ambulance staff (FTE)†,‡ | Calls to which an emergency response was dispatched§,¶ | Proportion seen, but not conveyed to ED§,** | Recruitment site? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| London Ambulance Service NHS Trust | 8.6 million | 620 | 2597 | 1 047 357 | 34.4 | ✓ |
| North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust | 7 million | 14 000 | 2852 | 878 352 | 30.9 | ✓ |
| East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust | 6 million | 7500 | 1688 | 697 901 | 41.6 | – |
| West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust | 5.6 million | 5000 | 2201 | 838 069 | 37.3 | – |
| Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust | 5 million | 6000 | 1540 | 521 331 | 31.1 | ✓ |
| East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust | 4.8 million | 6425 | 1484 | 542 325 | 33.6 | ✓ |
| South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust | 4.6 million | 3600 | 1592 | 656 338 | 45.3 | – |
| South Central Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust | 4 million | 3554 | 1041 | 445 798 | 42.0 | – |
| North East Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust | 2.7 million | 3200 | 642 | 297 826 | 32.5 | – |
| South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust | 2.5 million | 5000 | 1875 | 599 189 | 52.4 | ✓ |
| Isle of Wight NHS Trust | 140 000 | 147 | 60 | 19 683 | 51.8 | – |
*Information from the following sources: refs. 29–41
†Information from ref. 42.
‡Qualified ambulance staff here includes paramedics, technicians, advanced practitioners and ambulance service managers but does not include ambulance trainees.
§Taken from ref. 43.
¶Face-to-face responses as a result of 111 calls.
**Treatment at the scene or onward referral to an alternative care pathway and those with a patient journey to a destination other than ED.
Participants’ characteristics
| Participant | Gender | Approximate ambulance service experience (years) | Paramedic training route | Role specialism |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | 10 | HEI | Clinical |
| 2 | Male | 18 | AT | Clinical |
| 3 | Male | 22 | AT | Clinical |
| 4 | Female | 15 | AT | Clinical |
| 5 | Male | 25 | AT | Clinical |
| 6 | Male | 14 | AT | Management |
| 7 | Male | 6 | AT | Education |
| 8 | Male | 32 | AT | Management |
| 9 | Male | 19 | AT | Clinical |
| 10 | Male | 33 | AT | Education |
| 11 | Female | 11 | HEI | Management |
| 12 | Male | 21 | AT | Clinical |
| 13 | Female | 8 | AT | Management |
| 14 | Male | 21 | AT | Education |
| 15 | Male | 22 | AT | Clinical |
| 16 | Female | 24 | AT | Education |
| 17 | Male | 18 | AT | Clinical |
| 18 | Male | 45 | AT | Education |
| 19 | Male | 12 | AT | Education |
AT, ambulance trust; HEI, higher education institute.
Themes within participant interviews and quotes illustrating them
| Theme | Subtheme | Illustrative quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Need for relevant historical information to guide care and conveyance decisions | Information gaps about patients prior history | The biggest challenge begins with seizures themselves because more often than not when a crew arrives the seizure has ceased so you're relying entirely on individuals present to describe things to you… If you've only got the individual that suffered the seizure present while they're in the recovery phase it's very difficult to establish a full history. You've got to think about whats caused it … it might be epilepsy, but you've got to think about hypoxia, hyperglycaemia, is there any sort of toxic issues going on. (p. 4) |
| Obtaining information is challenging | Finding a patient with medical alert band on them to say that they've got epilepsy or carrying a seizure diary is like ‘striking gold’…most of the time you're guessing really what's normal for the patient. You are trying to pick it up and work it out as you go along and you reach a sort of limit of what you can access, especially if the patient remains postictal while they're in your care… (p. 1) | |
| Perverse incentives to convey to ED caused by time pressure/performance requirements | Times pressure can impact care decisions | There's an expectation that we will turn a job around you know…if they've been on scene for 20/30 min crews start to feel almost panicky that they're taking up time and that they need to get on with it. (p. 4) |
| Time pressures operate differently in rural areas | Large urban areas are saturated with hospitals and if I'm getting monitored and measured on time performance well I might as well just take all my epileptic patients to hospital because I'm only 4 min away…I've done my job, the patient's safe and I've hit my time targets, I'm not going to be criticised by anybody. Whereas where we work in a more rural setting…that's not the case. (p. 8) | |
| Knowledge gaps and uncertainty about postictal care | Limited training on seizures for paramedics | Epilepsy and convulsions don't come into any post-registration training… I have not had a single days training in managing convulsions since I was first trained in 1987. (p. 8) |
| Knowledge and confidence in seizure management low | There certainly needs to be more training on epilepsy because hand on heart I think if you took most ambulance crews today and said tell me about epilepsy, tell me what's going on, tell me about serial convulsions, tell me about status epilepticus, tell me about eclampsia and how would you recognise that from somebody having an epileptic convulsion, I think you would start hitting boundaries, I really do. (p. 8) | |
| Limitations in care pathways and need for patient centred care | Pathfinder offers some reassurance and structured decision-making | If we follow that (Paramedic Pathfinder), the Trust will support us in our decision-making… so if something were to go wrong and we've used Pathfinder, that supports us. (p. 6) |
| For most JRALC and pathfinder are unhelpful | There's] only one paragraph in JRCALC that relates to patients who've had a seizure…it's very vague, it's definitely left to your own clinical interpretation about what you feel is safe. (p. 1) | |
| Fear of adverse events if patient is not conveyed | They worry the patient is going to have another convulsion. How do they differentiate between the patients that need to go to hospital vs the patients that don't?…I think the service would support you [if an adverse event occurred] but I think over half of staff think they won't be… its of a lack of information about what actually happens the vast majority of times. (p. 3) | |
| Lack of alternative care pathways | We struggle for alternative pathways and so while we might be directed towards primary care, when we actually try and put some of those pathways into actual practice, they do seem to be lacking. (p. 7) |
P, participant number.