Description of procedures performed on patients by emergency medical services during mass casualty incidents in the United States

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

W.B. Saunders

Abstract

Background Emergency medical services (EMS) preparedness is essential to reduce morbidity and mortality from mass casualty incidents (MCIs). Objectives We sought to describe types and frequencies of common procedures performed during MCIs by EMS providers at different service levels. Methods This study was carried out using the 2012 US National EMS Public-Release Research Dataset maintained by the National Emergency Medical Services Information System. Emergency medical services activations coded as MCI at dispatch or by EMS personnel were included. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services service level was used for the level of service provided. A descriptive analysis characterizing the most common procedure types and frequencies by service level was carried out. Results Among the 19 831 189 EMS activations in the 2012 national data set, 53 334 activations had an MCI code, of which 26 110 activations were included. There were 8179 advanced life support (31.3%), 5811 basic life support (22.3%), 399 air medical transport (air transport fixed or rotary) (1.5%), and 38 specialty care transport (0.2%) activations. A total of 107 different procedure types were reported. The most common procedures by procedure count were spine immobilization (21.8%) followed by venous access extremity (14.1%) and assessment adult (13.4%). A similar order was found for procedure frequencies by included EMS activations (24.1%, 19.3%, and 18.3%, respectively). Top 20 procedures had different frequencies by levels of care except for medical director control (P =.19). Conclusions Advanced EMS interventions are not frequent during MCIs in the United States. Emergency medical services systems with other types of providers or MCI response patterns might report different findings. © 2015 Elsevier Inc.

Description

Keywords

Catheterization, peripheral, Emergency medical services, Female, Humans, Immobilization, Life support care, Male, Mass casualty incidents, Monitoring, physiologic, Oximetry, Symptom assessment, United states, Administrative personnel, Advanced life support, Air medical transport, Article, Basic life support, Clinical assessment, Cross-sectional study, Descriptive research, Emergency health service, Emergency patient, Emergency treatment, Human, Intervention study, Major clinical study, Mass disaster, Medicaid, Medical information system, Medicare, Patient transport, Priority journal, Rescue personnel, Retrospective study, Specialty care transport, Spine immobilization, Technical and domestic health care assistance, Venous access extremity, Catheterization, Long term care, Physiologic monitoring, Statistics and numerical data, Utilization

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By