| Literature DB >> 31565440 |
Nikolai Ramadanov1, Roman Klein2, Abner Daniel Aguilar Valdez3, Wilhelm Behringer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of the present study was to determine the medication appropriateness (MA) in prehospital emergency physician deployments according to the hospital discharge diagnosis and to investigate the factors influencing the MA.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31565440 PMCID: PMC6745092 DOI: 10.1155/2019/6947698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Med Int ISSN: 2090-2840 Impact factor: 1.112
Listing of the deployment distribution according to specialty, medical educational status, and approval for emergency medicine of the prehospital emergency physician.
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| Internal medicine | 453 |
| Surgery | 195 |
| Anaesthesiology | 9 |
| General medicine | 51 |
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| Specialist | 227 |
| Resident physician | 481 |
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| Lower approval (“Fachkunde Rettungsdienst”) | 467 |
| Higher approval (“Zusatzbezeichnung Notfallmedizin”) | 241 |
The 10 most common administered drugs (n = 224) in prehospital emergency physician deployment with missing MA.
| Drugs | Proportion, % ( |
|---|---|
| Ringer solution | 27% (59) |
| Heparin | 13% (28) |
| Nitrospray | 10% (21) |
| Furosemide | 6% (14) |
| Morphine | 6% (14) |
| Urapidil | 5% (12) |
| Metoclopramid | 4% (9) |
| Aspirin | 4% (9) |
| Novalgin | 4% (9) |
| Bayotensin | 3.5% (8) |
Administered drugs with missing MA (n = 224), summarized in medication groups by ATC codes.
| Medication groups (grouped by ATC codes), number (%) | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | J | L | B | C | G | M | N | R | H | V |
| 71 (32%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 37 (16%) | 61 (27%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 34 (15%) | 6 (3%) | 4 (2%) | 11 (5%) |
ATC codes: A, alimentary tract and metabolism; J, anti-infectives for systemic use; L, antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents; B, blood and blood forming organs; C, cardiovascular system; G, genitourinary system and sex hormones; M, musculoskeletal system; N, nervous system; R, respiratory system; H, systemic hormonal preparations; V, various. ATC, anatomic therapeutic chemical classification.
10 most common discharge diagnoses (n = 708).
| I10.91 | Hypertensive crisis | 9% (64) |
| I50.9 | Cardiac decompensation | 6% (40) |
| I63.9 | Stroke | 5% (35) |
| I21.4/I21.3/I21.9 | Myocardial infarction | 4.5% (33) |
| E16.2/E15 | Hypoglycaemia/hypoglycaemic coma | 4% (26) |
| G40.9 | Seizure | 3% (24) |
| E86 | Exsiccosis | 3% (20) |
| J15.9 | Pneumonia | 2.5% (19) |
| J44.09 | Exacerbated COPD | 2.5% (18) |
| I48.9 | Arrhythmia absoluta | 2.5% (17) |
Figure 1Representation of the MA taking into account the medical educational status of the prehospital emergency physician. p=0.04; number of deployments.