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Emergency Medical Services

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Title: Emergency Medical Services


1
Emergency Medical Services
Pre-Hospital Care
  • Bruce Goldfeder, MD
  • University of Florida
  • Medical Director
  • PreHospital Care NASA

2
1966 National Highway Safety Act
  • Authorized the US Department of Transportation
    (DOT) for prehospital medical services to fund
  • Ambulances
  • Equipment
  • Communications
  • Training programs

3
Emergency Medical Services Systems Act of 1973
(public law 93-154)
  • Funded and authorized the Department of
    Health, Education and Welfare to develop EMS
    throughout the country.

4
Public Law 93-154
15 components essential to an EMS system
  • 9. Transfer of care
  • 10. Consumer participation
  • 11. Public education
  • 12. Public safety agencies
  • 13. Standard medical records
  • 14. Independent review and evaluation
  • 15. Disaster linkage
  • Communications
  • Training
  • Manpower
  • Mutual aid
  • Transportation
  • Accessibility
  • Facilities
  • Critical care units

5
  • 911 Emergency telephone number
  • essential front door of the EMS system
  • Enhanced 911 (E-911) equipment
  • provides automatic number and location
    identification

6
Emergency Medical Dispatch (EMD)
  • Based on the principle that good information
    gathering during the dispatch phase of an
    emergency can better prepare responding EMS
    providers to deal with the situation at the
    scene.
  • Deliver basic emergency care instruction to
    people on the scene.
  • Prioritize request for emergency medical
    assistance.
  • Ensure only appropriate agencies or prehospital
    providers are dispatched.

7
Emergency Medical Dispatch (contd)
  • May be carried out by a variety of agencies
  • EMS agency
  • Law enforcement agency (LEA)
  • Separate public safety dispatch center

8
Why is 911 better than dialing 0 ?
  • 1st Additional call and routing process,
    which takes precious time.
  • 2nd The caller may not be connected with the
    correct jurisdiction or service that he needs.

9
TRAINING
  • Community education
  • First aid
  • Child safety
  • EMS system access
  • Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)

10
DUAL-RESPONSE SYSTEM
  • (A) First responders (FRs)
  • Individuals who may be the first to arrive at a
    medical emergency. Example - Firefighters,
    police, park rangers, or citizen volunteers.
  • (B) Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)
  • EMT basic (EMT-B) - CPR, AED, extrication,
    immobilization.
  • EMT intermediate (EMT-I) - IV access, PASG
  • EMT paramedic (EMT-P) - Intubation/RSI, EKG,
    synchronized cardioversion, manual
    defibrillation, drug therapy

11
PUBLIC INTEREST PARTICIPATION Key ingredients
in any EMS system!
  • Urban areas
  • Paid public safety and ambulance personnel.
  • Rural or wilderness areas
  • Volunteers, park rangers, or ski patrols.

12
MUTUAL AID AGREEMENTS
  • EMS services have agreements with neighboring
    jurisdictions so that uninterrupted emergency
    care
  • is available when local agencies are overwhelmed
    and/or unable to provide services.

13
Mutual Aid Agreements
14
Mutual Aid Agreements
15
TRANSPORTATION
  • Ground ambulances
  • Provide most EMS transportation.
  • The most important aspect of ambulance design is
    that the attendants must be able to provide
    airway and ventilatory support while safely
    transporting the patient.
  • Air transport
  • Helicopter (Rotor-wing)
  • Airplane (Fixed-wing)

16
ACCESS TO CARE
  • A successful EMS system ensures that all
    individuals have access to emergency care
    regardless of their ability to pay or type of
    insurance coverage.
  • Emergency physicians must serve
  • as the patients advocate!!

17
FACILITIES
  • General
  • Transport to the closest appropriate hospital.
  • If multiple hospitals within the same transport
    time patients choice.
  • Specialized receiving facilities
  • Higher level of care warranted
  • Transport to that institution (by passing closer
    hospitals).
  • i.e. trauma, burn, stroke or angioplasty center

18
Critical Care Units (CCUs)
Tertiary care facilities should be identified by
every EMS system to provide specialty care that
is not available in typical community
hospitals.Most common reasons for tertiary care
emergency transfer
  • Trauma
  • High-risk obstetrics
  • Cardiac care
  • Burns
  • Neonatal intensive care
  • Spinal cord injury
  • Neurosurgery

19
TRANSFER OF CARE
  • Must be made with maximum safety for the patient!

20
CONSUMER PARTCIPATION
  • Laypersons should be represented on EMS councils.
  • Two important components of a successful EMS
    system
  • Lay public first aid training
  • Implementation of a 911 system

21
Public Information and Education
  • In designing a public information program, the
    EMS councils goal should be for the public
  • Understand how the community stands to
    benefit from an excellent EMS system.
  • Be prepared to render first aid care.
  • Know how to access the EMS system quickly.
  • Understand that patients may not be delivered to
    the hospital of their choice under
    life-threatening conditions.

22
PUBLIC SAFETY AGENCIES
  • Strong ties with police and fire departments
  • Often provide first-response service because
    their personnel are often the first on the scene
    of an emergency.
  • I.e., police carrying oxygen and automatic
    defibrillators

23
Standardization of Patients Records
  • All ambulance services within a specific region
    should use a similar reporting form that can be
    quickly and easily be interpreted by receiving
    nurses and physicians.

24
Independent Review Evaluation
  • Continuous quality improvement (CQI) is the sum
    of all quantities undertaken to assess and
    improve the products and services provided
    throughout the entire EMS system.
  • monitoring radio communications
  • response times
  • patients care records
  • outcome studies, i.e. cardiac arrest and multiple
    trauma.
  • protocol review

25
DISASTER PLANNING
  • The EMS system is an integral element of
    disaster preparedness and planning.
  • Important role in initial response and
    transportation
  • Establish a regional disaster preparedness plan
    in coordination with public safety agencies,
    government medical community
  • Periodic disaster drills

26
Short Break
27
Medical Direction
  • The process by which a dedicated physician(s)
    guides and oversees the patient care that is
    provided by an EMS system.

28
MEDICAL DIRECTION
  • Why do paramedics, who are licensed by the state,
    need a medical director or physician advisor?

29
ON-LINE MEDICAL DIRECTION (OLMD)
  • a.k.a. direct medical control,
  • on-line medical command, or
  • real-time medical control.
  • Direct medical communication to personnel in the
    field.
  • in person
  • radio
  • phone communication
  • landline (traditional telephone)
  • cellular

30
OFF-LINE MEDICAL CONTROL
  • Responsibility of the service medical director
  • Development protocols and standing orders
  • Development of medical accountability (QA)
  • Development of ongoing education
  • Physicians must remember that they have the
    ultimate responsibility for the overall quality
    of PreHospital medical care.

31
Qualifications of an EMS Medical Director
  • Licensed physician with interest, experience, and
    knowledge in emergency medicine and PreHospital
    care.
  • Preferable if full-time, practicing, emergency
    physician at the lead hospital for the EMS
    system, with additional training and experience
    in EMS.

32
Medical Basis for EMS
33
Emergency Cardiac Care
  • ALS saves lives after sudden cardiac arrest.
  • The number of lives saved and the cost are
    debated.
  • Without treatment at the scene, the survival
    rate of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is
    virtually zero.
  • Seattle and King Count, Washington
  • 26 patients successfully resuscitated from
    out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
  • New York City
  • 1.4 overall survival
  • Outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in New
    York City. The Pre-Hospital Arrest Survival
    Evaluation (PHASE) study.
  • JAMA 1994 Mar (Lombardi, Gallagher, and Gennis)

34
Universal Precautions
  • Blood and body fluids
  • Masks
  • Goggles
  • Gloves

35
Improve Survival
  • Shorten interval between collapse and
    defibrillation.
  • Local system must optimize the chain of
    survival
  • early access
  • early CPR
  • early defibrillation
  • early ALS
  • First responders
  • AEDs

36
Pilot programs
37
Pilot programs
38
Trauma Care
  • Delivery of critically injured trauma patients to
    trauma centers saves lives.
  • Controversial PASG
  • IV on scene (field) vs. en route
  • Houston no IVF in Prehospital or
    E.R. for hypotensive
    victims of penetrating truncal trauma.

39
The Chain of Survival
40
The Chain of Survival
  • Early Access Someone suspects or determines the
    victim is in sudden cardiac arrest and calls for
    help
  • Early CPR Someone trained in CPR keeps the
    victims blood flowing until defibrillation can
    begin
  • Early Defibrillation Someone trained in
    defibrillation shocks the victim as quickly as
    possible
  • Early Advanced Care Medical personnel provide
    advanced cardiac care which can include airway
    support, medications, and hospital services

41
Vehicles
  • First-response units do not transport patients
  • fire engines
  • police cruisers
  • rescue vehicles
  • Ground ambulances
  • Transport ambulances
  • Type 1 standard pick-up chassis with a modular
    box to carry personnel, patient, and equipment
  • Type 2 enlarged van-type vehicle
  • Type 3 van chassis with a modular box in the
    back.

42
Defibrillators
  • Automated external defibrillators (AEDs)
  • analyze the patients rhythm, determine whether a
    defibrillatory shock is indicated, charge the
    capacitors, and then inform the operator that a
    shock is advised.
  • defibrillate only for ventricular fibrillation
    and very fast wide QRS
    complex tachycardias (usually
    over 180/bpm)
  • used only in pulses and apneic patients.

43
Defibrillators
Physio Control Life Pack 12
Zoll M Series
HP CodeMaster 100
44
Automated External Defibrillators
Physio-Control LIFEPAK 500
Laerdal HeartStart
45
Prehospital Airway Devices
  • The establishment and maintenance of a patient
    airway is the primary task of the prehospital
    emergency care provider.
  • Think ABCs!!!

46
Basic Airway Devices
  • Oropharyngeal airways (OPA)
  • Nasopharyngeal airways (NPA)
  • Bag-valve-mask ventilation (BVM).
  • Pulmonary Resuscitator

47
Advanced Airway Devices
  • Endotracheal tubes and blades
  • End-tidal CO2 detectors (ETCO2)
  • Pulse-Oximeter
  • Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA)
  • Esophageal Gastric Tube Airway (EGTA)
  • Esophageal Intubation Detector
  • Esophageal Obturator Airway (EOA)
  • Blind insertion
  • Pharyngeotracheal Lumen Airway (PTL)
  • Esophageal-Trachea Combitube (ETC)
  • McGill forceps
  • Melker Cricothyrotomy equipment

48
Vascular Access Equipment
  • Paramedics are very adept at placing IVs
  • IV access should not prolong scene times in a
    trauma patient, especially when Load and Go
    criteria are present

49
Spinal Immobilization ABCs
  • The preservation of integrity of the spinal
    column is of paramount importance in the field.
  • C-S stabilization and airway assessment are
    performed simultaneously.
  • Manual stabilization of the neck is not released
    until the patient has been transferred and
    securely strapped to a board.

50
Spinal Immobilization ABCs
Odontoid fracture Atlantoaxial dislocation
51
Air Medical Transport
  • Helicopter
  • inventor - Igor Sikorsky
  • Burma, 1945
  • first rotor-wing medical evacuation
  • Korean War
  • 20,000 transported patients
  • Vietnam War
  • 370,000 transported patients
  • Denver, 1972
  • first hospital-based civilian program

52
Air Medical Transport
  • Association of Air Medical Services (AAMS)
  • Domestic 362 air medical providers
  • International 23 air medical providers
  • Hospital(s) based
  • Helicopter cost 1-5 million
  • annual operating cost 2 million
  • Patients transported
  • 827 per program
  • 1997 - survey of 126 United States air medical
    programs

53
Clinical Use of Helicopters
  • Fast ambulances
  • 125-175 mph
  • 150-200 mile range
  • Two major types of helicopter missions
  • (1) Trauma/medical scene responses (30)
  • (2) Interfacility transfers
    (70)

54
Rotor-wing aircraft
  • Advantages
  • Can be based at a hospital or another location
    near your service area.
  • Do not require a runway for takeoff and landing.
  • Capable of landing in relatively small and
    secluded areas.
  • Usually ready for takeoff in a matter of minutes.

55
Fixed-wing Aircraft
  • Great range - can fly thousands of miles (rotor
    maximum range of 350 miles)
  • Able to transport a heavier load
  • Faster
  • More economical for most flight distances
    (helicopter more expensive than ground
    transport).
  • When pressurized, preferable for conditions
    affected by altitude.

56
Alachua County Emergency Services
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