| Literature DB >> 31864305 |
Brian Power1, Gerard Bury2, John Ryan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Irish ambulance services have traditionally transported all patients following an emergency (112/999) call, regardless of acuity, to an emergency department (ED). A proposal to introduce Treat and Referral, an established care pathway in some jurisdictions, is under active consideration in Ireland. This will present a significant change. Stakeholder engagement is recognised as an essential component of management of such change. This study has conducted a multicentre, cross-sectional survey exploring opinions on the introduction of Treat and Referral among key Irish stakeholders; consultants in emergency medicine, paramedics and advanced paramedics.Entities:
Keywords: Admission avoidance; Consultant in emergency medicine; Emergency departments; Paramedic; Prehospital care; Treat and referral; Treat and release
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31864305 PMCID: PMC6925841 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-019-0295-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Service area and clinical level of respondents
| Service area | Paramedic | Advanced Paramedic | Emergency Medicine Consultant | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Totally urban | 50 | 14 | 6 | 70 (10.6%) |
| Mainly urban | 164 | 116 | 19 | 299 (45.5%) |
| Mainly rural | 150 | 102 | 13 | 265 (40.3%) |
| Totally rural | 11 | 12 | 1 | 24 (3.6%) |
| Total (response rate) | 375 (27%) | 244 (80%) | 39 (62%) | 658 |
Geographical spread of EM Consultant respondents
| Area | Respondents | Percentage per area |
|---|---|---|
| Dublin City | 12 | 41.4% |
| Mid Leinster area | 5 | 100.0% |
| North Eastern area | 3 | 75.0% |
| Southern area | 10 | 66.7% |
| Western area | 9 | 64.3% |
| Total | 39 | 58.2% |
Survey statements on Treat and Referral
| Text | Median score (range) | PHECC practitioner agree/ strongly agree (CI 95%) | EM Consultant Agree/ strongly agree (CI 95%) | Statistical difference between PHECC practitioners and EM Consultants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T&R will result in improved patient care. | 4 (1–5) | 66.5% (±3.5%) | 61.1% (±10.2%) | |
| T&R will increase clinical judgement skills. | 4 (1–5) | 73.5% (±3.5%) | 61.1% (±10.2%) | |
| T&R will reduce unnecessary ambulance journeys. | 4 (1–5) | 87% (±3.5%) | 83.3% (±10.2%) | |
| T&R will result in increased ambulance availabilities for emergencies locally. | 4 (1–5) | 83.9% (±3.5%) | 55.6% (±10.2%) | p < 0.001 |
| T&R should only be available as an advanced paramedic intervention. | 2 (1–5) | 22.6% (±3.5%) | 57.2% (±10.2%) | |
| T&R should only be available as an intervention to paramedics with several years’ experience. | 3 (1–5) | 45.4% (±3.5%) | 47.2% (±10.2%) | p = 0.525 |
| T&R should only be available for adult patients (18 and over). | 4 (1–5) | 57.2% (±3.5%) | 47.2% (±10.2%) | p = 0.005 |
| I would be happy for a family member to be offered T&R by a paramedic or advanced paramedic following an acute event. | 4 (1–5) | 69.6% (±3.5%) | 69.4% (±10.2%) | |
| Patients offered T&R should be given specific written after-care instruction, similar to head injury advice leaflet given by emergency department staff. | 4 (1–5) | 88.2% (±3.5%) | 91.7% (±10.2%) | |
| Patients offered T&R should be limited to specific conditions such as hypoglycaemia and isolated seizure until research demonstrates it is a safe clinical practice. | 4 (1–5) | 50.6% (±3.5%) | 69.4% (±10.2%) | p = 0.013 |
| Patients offered Treat and Referral will require their GP to be informed about the episode through e-mail or ordinary mail by the treating paramedic or advanced paramedic. | 3 (1–5) | 47.5% (±3.5%) | 88.9% (±10.2%) | p < 0.001 |
| Mean | 3.6 | 62.9% | 66.6% |