Computer assisted assessment and advice for "non-serious" 999 ambulance service callers: the potential impact on ambulance despatch.
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVE To investigate the potential impact for ambulance services of telephone assessment and triage for callers who present with non-serious problems (Category C calls) as classified by ambulance service call takers. DESIGN Pragmatic controlled trial. Calls identified using priority dispatch protocols as non-serious were allocated to intervention and control groups according to time of call. Ambulance dispatch occurred according to existing procedures. During intervention sessions, nurses or paramedics within the control room used a computerised decision support system to provide telephone assessment, triage and, if appropriate, offer advice to permit estimation of the potential impact on ambulance dispatch. SETTING Ambulance services in London and the West Midlands. SUBJECTS Patients for whom emergency calls were made to the ambulance services between April 1998 and May 1999 during four hour sessions sampled across all days of the week between 0700 and 2300. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Triage decision, ambulance cancellation, attendance at an emergency department. RESULTS In total, there were 635 intervention calls and 611 controls. Of those in the intervention group, 330 (52.0%) were triaged as not requiring an emergency ambulance, and 119 (36.6%) of these did not attend an emergency department. This compares with 55 (18.1%) of those triaged by a nurse or paramedic as requiring an ambulance (odds ratio 2.62; 95% CI 1.78 to 3.85). Patients triaged as not requiring an emergency ambulance were less likely to be admitted to an inpatient bed (odds ratio 0.55; 95% CI 0.33 to 0.93), but even so 30 (9.2%) were admitted. Nurses were more likely than paramedics to triage calls into the groups classified as not requiring an ambulance. After controlling for age, case mix, time of day, day of week, season, and ambulance service, the results of a logistic regression analysis revealed that this difference was significant with an odds ratio for nurses:paramedics of 1.28 (95% CI 1.12 to 1.47). CONCLUSIONS The findings indicate that telephone assessment of Category C calls identifies patients who are less likely to require emergency department care and that this could have a significant impact on emergency ambulance dispatch rates. Nurses were more likely than paramedics to assess calls as requiring an alternative response to emergency ambulance despatch, but the extent to which this relates to aspects of training and professional perspective is unclear. However, consideration should be given to the acceptability, reliability, and cost consequences of this intervention before it can be recommended for full evaluation.
منابع مشابه
The acceptability of an emergency medical dispatch system to people who call 999 to request an ambulance.
OBJECTIVE To determine the acceptability of an emergency medical dispatch (EMD) system to people who call 999 to request an ambulance. METHODS Postal questionnaires to two systematic random samples of approximately 500 named callers to one ambulance service before, and one year after, the introduction of EMD. RESULTS The response rate was 72% (355 of 493) before, and 63% (297 of 466) after,...
متن کاملSafety of telephone consultation for "non-serious" emergency ambulance service patients.
OBJECTIVE To assess the safety of nurses and paramedics offering telephone assessment, triage, and advice as an alternative to immediate ambulance dispatch for emergency ambulance service callers classified by lay call takers as presenting with "non-serious" problems (category C calls). DESIGN Data for this study were collected as part of a pragmatic randomised controlled trial reported elsew...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Emergency medicine journal : EMJ
دوره 20 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2003