| Literature DB >> 33287801 |
Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani1,2, Mehrdad Amir-Behghadami3,4,5, Masoumeh Gholizadeh1,6, Ali Janati1,6, Farzad Rahmani7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Management of Life-threatening Emergency (LTE) patients in urban and rural areas is an important challenge, which can affect pre-hospital mortality rate. Therefore, Non-hospital Health Center (NHHC) must be prepared to manage such emergency cases that may occur in the geographic area where these centers act. The aim of this study was to explore domains related to the preparedness of NHHCs to manage LTE patients through resorting to healthcare providers' and experts' perspectives.Entities:
Keywords: Life-threatening emergency; Non-hospital health centers; Preparedness; Qualitative study
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33287801 PMCID: PMC7720617 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05981-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Demographic characteristics of participants in the study
| Characteristic | Qualitative variables | Number (Percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FGDs with experts | Emergency medicine | 4 (16%) | |
| PHC specialists | 2 (8%) | ||
| Executives of health centers | 5 (20%) | ||
| EMS experts | 2 (8%) | ||
| SSIs with providers | Physicians | 6 (24%) | |
| Nurses | 6 (24%) | ||
| Male | 20 (80%) | ||
| Female | 5 (20%) | ||
| 30–40 | 8 (32%) | ||
| 41–50 | 17 (68%) | ||
| 5–15 | 15 (60%) | ||
| 16–25 | 10 (40%) | ||
| Bachelor | 5 (20%) | ||
| Masters | 3 (12%) | ||
| PHD | 3 (12%) | ||
| MD, specialist | 14 (56%) | ||
The thematic framework explaining the themes and sub-themes about preparedness of NHHCs in managing the LTE patients
| Themes | Sub-themes | Issues |
|---|---|---|
| Having medical supplies and equipment for airway management, respiration, circulation and shock | ||
| Having medical supplies and equipment for the management of specific injuries | ||
| Having sterilization equipment | ||
| Usability of equipment and supplies to provide prompt and uninterrupted initial interventions | ||
| Location of centers | ||
| The layout of the internal physical space appropriately and according to the standard | ||
| Having essential emergency medicines | ||
| The adequacy of emergency medicines to manage LTEs | ||
| Having some medications, such as benzodiazepines and opioids | ||
| Having enough human resource | ||
| Having an expert team including physicians and nurses for first aid and CPR when managingLTE patients | ||
| Having a human force with practical knowledge and skill | ||
| Protocol for the management of acute coronary syndrome | ||
| Protocol for managing multiple trauma patients | ||
| Dedicated guidelines for LTEs referral | ||
| Written guidelines for LTE potential management | ||
| Maintenance and calibration policies of medical equipment | ||
| Basic airway management, respiration, circulation and shock | ||
| Oxygen | ||
| External hemorrhage control | ||
| Basic fracture management and splinting of external fractures | ||
| Spine Immobilization in Multi-Trauma Patients | ||
| Basic management of wounds and burns | ||
| Having a routine plan to repair the equipment | ||
| Contract with reputable companies to routinely control equipment and ensure its proper operation | ||
| Adequate monitoring of drug stocks based on the routine schedule | ||
| Having a plan to request and supply medicines. | ||
| Storage of medicines in better conditions | ||
| Proper referral system | ||
| Continuing medical education | ||
| Mortality audit of LETs or risk management in order to prevent possible errors | ||
| Effects of facilities of the centers as their service providers qualifications of patient satisfaction | ||
| Percentage of successful CPRs | ||
| Mortality rate | ||
| Survival of myocardial infarction |
Fig. 1Themes and sub-themes classified based on Donabedian’s triple model