39 results on '"M. Rehn"'
Search Results
2. Post-mission debriefs in helicopter emergency medicine services- introducing "The compassionate debrief".
- Author
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Rognås L, Rehn M, and Nørby KD
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declarations. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2025
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3. Attributes of leadership skill development in high-performance pre-hospital medical teams: results of an international multi-service prospective study.
- Author
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Deodatus JA, Kratz MA, Steller M, Veeger N, Dercksen B, Lyon RM, Rehn M, Rognås L, Coniglio C, Sheridan B, Tschautscher C, Lockey DJ, and Ter Avest E
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Male, Female, Surveys and Questionnaires, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Adult, Clinical Competence, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Middle Aged, Emergency Medicine education, Emergency Medicine organization & administration, Air Ambulances organization & administration, United States, Europe, Leadership
- Abstract
Backgrounds: Team leadership skills of physicians working in high-performing medical teams are directly related to outcome. It is currently unclear how these skills can best be developed. Therefore, in this multi-national cross-sectional prospective study, we explored the development of these skills in relation to physician-, organization- and training characteristics of Helicopter Emergency Medicine Service (HEMS) physicians from services in Europe, the United States of America and Australia., Methods: Physicians were asked to complete a survey regarding their HEMS service, training, and background as well as a full Leader Behavior Description Questionnaire (LBDQ). Primary outcomes were the 12 leadership subdomain scores as described in the LBDQ. Secondary outcome measures were the association of LBDQ subdomain scores with specific physician-, organization- or training characteristics and self-reported ways to improve leadership skills in HEMS physicians., Results: In total, 120 HEMS physicians completed the questionnaire. Overall, leadership LBDQ subdomain scores were high (10 out of 12 subdomains exceeded 70% of the maximum score). Whereas physician characteristics such as experience or base-specialty were unrelated to leadership qualities, both organization- and training characteristics were important determinants of leadership skill development. Attention to leadership skills during service induction, ongoing leadership training, having standards in place to ensure (regular) scenario training and holding structured mission debriefs each correlated with multiple LBDQ subdomain scores., Conclusions: Ongoing training of leadership skills should be stimulated and facilitated by organizations as it contributes to higher levels of proficiency, which may translate into a positive effect on patient outcomes., Trial Registration: Not applicable., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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4. The Field's mass shooting: emergency medical services response.
- Author
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Hansen PM, Mikkelsen S, Alstrøm H, Damm-Hejmdal A, Rehn M, and Berlac PA
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- Humans, Triage, Ambulances, Hospitals, Mass Casualty Incidents, Emergency Medical Services, Disaster Planning
- Abstract
Background: Major incidents (MI) happen infrequently in Scandinavia and mass shootings are even less frequently occurring. Case reports and research are called for, as literature is scarce. On 3rd July 2022, a mass shooting took place at the shopping mall Field's in Copenhagen, Denmark. Three people were killed and seven injured by a gunman, firing a rifle inside the mall. A further 21 people suffered minor injuries during the evacuation of the mall. In this case report, we describe the emergency medical services (EMS) incident response and evaluate the EMS´ adherence to the MI management guidelines to identify possible areas of improvement., Case Presentation: Forty-eight EMS units including five Tactical Emergency Medical Service teams were dispatched to the incident. Four critically injured patients were taken to two trauma hospitals. The deceased patients were declared dead at the scene and remained there for the sake of the investigation. A total of 24 patients with less severe and minor injuries were treated at four different hospitals in connection with the attack. The ambulance resources were inherently limited in the initial phase of the MI, mandating improvisation in medical incident command. Though challenged, Command and Control, Safety, Communication, Assessment, Triage, Treatment, Transport (CSCATTT) principles were followed., Conclusions: The EMS response generally adhered to national guidelines for MI. The activation of EMS and the hospital preparedness program was relevant. Important findings were communication shortcomings; inherent lack of readily available ambulance resources in the initial critical phase; uncertainty regarding the number of perpetrators; uncertainty regarding number of casualties and social media rumors that unnecessarily hampered and prolonged the response. The incident command had to use non-standard measures to mitigate potential challenges., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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5. The end of balloons? Our take on the UK-REBOA trial.
- Author
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Brede JR and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Humans, Aorta, Resuscitation, United Kingdom, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Balloon Occlusion, Endovascular Procedures, Shock, Hemorrhagic therapy
- Abstract
Background: Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) is increasingly used. The recently published UK-REBOA trial aimed to investigate patients suffering haemorrhagic shock and randomized to standard care alone or REBOA as adjunct to standard care and concludes that REBOA may increase the mortality., Main Body: In this commentary we try to balance the discussion on use of REBOA and address limitations in the UK-REBOA trial that may have influenced the outcome of the study., Conclusion: The situation is complex, and the patients are in extremis. In summary, we do not think this is the end of balloons., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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6. Comparison of three regimens with inhalational methoxyflurane versus intranasal fentanyl versus intravenous morphine in pre-hospital acute pain management: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial (PreMeFen).
- Author
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Simensen R, Fjose LO, Rehn M, Hagemo J, Thorsen K, and Heyerdahl F
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- Humans, Fentanyl, Morphine, Methoxyflurane, Hospitals, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Acute Pain
- Abstract
Background: Pre-hospital pain management has traditionally been performed with intravenous (IV) morphine, but oligoanalgesia remain a recognized problem. Pain reduction is essential for patient satisfaction and is regarded as a measure of successful treatment. We aim to establish whether non-invasive methods such as inhalation of methoxyflurane is non-inferior to intranasal fentanyl or non-inferior to the well-known IV morphine in the pre-hospital treatment of acute pain., Method/design: The PreMeFen study is a phase three, three-armed, randomized, controlled, non-inferiority trial to compare three regimens of analgesics: inhalation of methoxyflurane and intranasal (IN) fentanyl versus IV morphine. It is an open-label trial with a 1:1:1 randomization to the three treatment groups. The primary endpoint is the change in pain numeric rating scale (NRS) (0-10) from baseline to 10 min after start of investigational medicinal product administration (IMP). The non-inferiority margin was set to 1.3, and a sample size of 270 patients per protocol (90 in each treatment arm) will detect this difference with 90% power., Discussion: We chose a study design with comparison of analgesic regimens rather than fixed doses because of the substantial differences in drug characteristics and for the results to be relevant to inform policymakers in the pre-hospital setting. We recognize that easier administration of analgesics will lead to better pain management for many patients if the regimens are as good as the existing, and hence, we chose a non-inferiority design. The primary endpoint, the change in pain (NRS) after 10 min, is set to address the immediate need of pain reduction for patients with acute prehospital pain. On a later stage, more analgesic methods are often available. PreMeFen is a non-inferiority randomized controlled trial comparing three analgesic regimens aiming to establish whether inhalation of methoxyflurane or intranasal fentanyl is as good as IV morphine for fast reduction of acute pain in the prehospital setting., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Dispatch accuracy of physician-staffed emergency medical services in trauma care in south-east Norway: a retrospective observational study.
- Author
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Samdal M, Thorsen K, Græsli O, Sandberg M, and Rehn M
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Triage, Emergency Medical Dispatch, Emergency Medical Services, Physicians
- Abstract
Background: Selection of incidents and accurate identification of patients that require assistance from physician-staffed emergency medical services (P-EMS) remain essential. We aimed to evaluate P-EMS availability, the underlying criteria for dispatch, and the corresponding dispatch accuracy of trauma care in south-east Norway in 2015, to identify areas for improvement., Methods: Pre-hospital data from emergency medical coordination centres and P-EMS medical databases were linked with data from the Norwegian Trauma Registry (NTR). Based on a set of conditions (injury severity, interventions performed, level of consciousness, incident category), trauma incidents were defined as complex, warranting P-EMS assistance, or non-complex. Incident complexity and P-EMS involvement were the main determinants when assessing the triage accuracy. Undertriage was adjusted for P-EMS availability and response and transport times., Results: Among 19,028 trauma incidents, P-EMS were involved in 2506 (13.2%). The range of overtriage was 74-80% and the range of undertriage was 20-32%. P-EMS readiness in the event of complex incidents ranged from 58 to 70%. The most frequent dispatch criterion was "Police/fire brigade request immediate response" recorded in 4321 (22.7%) of the incidents. Criteria from the groups "Accidents" and "Road traffic accidents" were recorded in 10,875 (57.2%) incidents, and criteria from the groups "Transport reservations" and "Unidentified problem" in 6025 (31,7%) incidents. Among 4916 patient pathways in the NTR, 681 (13.9%) could not be matched with pre-hospital data records., Conclusions: Both P-EMS availability and dispatch accuracy remain suboptimal in trauma care in south-east Norway. Dispatch criteria are too vague to facilitate accurate P-EMS dispatch, and pre-hospital data is inconsistent and insufficient to provide basic data for scientific research. Future dispatch criteria should focus on the care aspect of P-EMS. Better tools for both dispatch and incident handling for the emergency medical coordination centres are essential. In general, coordination, standardisation, and integration of existing data systems should enhance the quality of trauma care and increase patient safety., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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8. The Great Belt train accident: the emergency medical services response.
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Hansen PM, Jepsen SB, Mikkelsen S, and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Accidents, Ambulances, Humans, Triage, Emergency Medical Services, Mass Casualty Incidents
- Abstract
Background: Major incidents (MI) are rare occurrences in Scandinavia. Literature depicting Scandinavian MI management is scarce and case reports and research is called for. In 2019, a trailer falling off a freight train struck a passing high-speed train on the Great Belt Bridge in Denmark, killing eight people instantly and injuring fifteen people. We aim to describe the emergency medical services (EMS) response to this MI and evaluate adherence to guidelines to identify areas of improvement for future MI management., Case Presentation: Nineteen EMS units were dispatched to the incident site. Ambulances transported fifteen patients to a trauma centre after evacuation. Deceased patients were pronounced life-extinct on-scene. Radio communication was partly compromised, since 38.9% of the radio shifts were not according to the planned radio grid and presented a potential threat to patient outcome and personnel safety. Access to the incident site was challenging and delayed due to traffic congestion and safety issues., Conclusion: Despite harsh weather conditions and complex logistics, the availability of EMS units was sufficient and patient treatment and evacuation was uncomplicated. Triage was relevant, but at the physicians' discretion. Important findings were communication challenges and the consequences of difficult access to the incident site. There is a need for an expansion of capacity in formal education in MI management in Denmark., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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9. REBOARREST, resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta in non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a study protocol for a randomised, parallel group, clinical multicentre trial.
- Author
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Brede JR, Skulberg AK, Rehn M, Thorsen K, Klepstad P, Tylleskär I, Farbu B, Dale J, Nordseth T, Wiseth R, and Krüger AJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Aorta, Humans, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Norway, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Resuscitation, Balloon Occlusion adverse effects, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest diagnosis, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Shock, Hemorrhagic therapy
- Abstract
Background: Survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is poor and dependent on high-quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) may be advantageous in non-traumatic OHCA due to the potential benefit of redistributing the cardiac output to organs proximal to the aortic occlusion. This theory is supported by data from both preclinical studies and human case reports., Methods: This multicentre trial will enrol 200 adult patients, who will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to either a control group that receives advanced cardiovascular life support (ACLS) or an intervention group that receives ACLS and REBOA. The primary endpoint will be the proportion of patients who achieve return of spontaneous circulation with a duration of at least 20 min. The secondary objectives of this trial are to measure the proportion of patients surviving to 30 days with good neurological status, to describe the haemodynamic physiology of aortic occlusion during ACLS, and to document adverse events., Discussion: Results from this study will assess the efficacy and safety of REBOA as an adjunctive treatment for non-traumatic OHCA. This novel use of REBOA may contribute to improve treatment for this patient cohort., Trial Registration: The trial is approved by the Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics in Norway (reference 152504) and is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (reference NCT04596514) and as Universal Trial Number WHO: U1111-1253-0322., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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10. Pre-hospital critical care management of severe hypoxemia in victims of Covid-19: a case series.
- Author
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Mæhlen JO, Mikalsen R, Heimdal HJ, Rehn M, Hagemo JS, and Ottestad W
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- COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 epidemiology, Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, Female, Hospitals, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Norway, Respiratory Insufficiency etiology, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 therapy, Critical Care methods, Critical Illness therapy, Oxygen Inhalation Therapy methods, Respiratory Insufficiency therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Despite critical hypoxemia, Covid-19 patients may present without proportional signs of respiratory distress. We report three patients with critical respiratory failure due to Covid-19, in which all presented with severe hypoxemia refractory to supplemental oxygen therapy. We discuss possible strategies for ventilatory support in the emergency pre-hospital setting, and point out some pitfalls regarding the management of these patients. Guidelines for pre-hospital care of critically ill Covid-19 patients cannot be established based on the current evidence base, and we have to apply our understanding of respiratory physiology and mechanics in order to optimize respiratory support., Methods: Three cases with similar clinical presentation were identified within the Norwegian national helicopter emergency medical service (HEMS) system. The HEMS units are manned by a consultant anaesthesiologist. Patient's next of kin and the Regional committee for medical and health research ethics approved the publication of this report., Conclusion: Patients with Covid-19 and severe hypoxemia may pose a considerable challenge for the pre-hospital emergency medical services. Intubation may be associated with a high risk of complications in these patients and should be carried out with diligence when considered necessary. The following interventions are worth considering in Covid-19 patients with refractory hypoxemia before proceeding to intubation. First, administering oxygen via a tight fitting BVM with an oxygen flow rate that exceeds the patient's ventilatory minute volume. Second, applying continuous positive airway pressure, while simultaneously maintaining a high FiO
2 . Finally, assuming the patient is cooperative, repositioning to prone position.- Published
- 2021
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11. Apnoeic oxygenation for emergency anaesthesia of pre-hospital trauma patients.
- Author
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Crewdson K, Heywoth A, Rehn M, Sadek S, and Lockey D
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- Adult, Airway Management adverse effects, Female, Humans, Hypoxia etiology, Hypoxia prevention & control, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Anesthesia, Cannula adverse effects, Emergency Service, Hospital, Oxygen Inhalation Therapy, Wounds and Injuries
- Abstract
Background: Efficient and timely airway management is universally recognised as a priority for major trauma patients, a proportion of whom require emergency intubation in the pre-hospital setting. Adverse events occur more commonly in emergency airway management, and hypoxia is relatively frequent. The aim of this study was to establish whether passive apnoeic oxygenation was effective in reducing the incidence of desaturation during pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia., Methods: A prospective before-after study was performed to compare patients receiving standard care and those receiving additional oxygen via nasal prongs. The primary endpoint was median oxygen saturation in the peri-rapid sequence induction period, (2 minutes pre-intubation to 2 minutes post-intubation) for all patients. Secondary endpoints included the incidence of hypoxia in predetermined subgroups., Results: Of 725 patients included; 188 patients received standard treatment and 537 received the intervention. The overall incidence of hypoxia (first recorded SpO
2 < 90%) was 16.7%; 10.9% had SpO2 < 85%. 98/725 patients (13.5%) were hypoxic post-intubation (final SpO2 < 90% 10 minutes post-intubation). Median SpO2 was 100% vs. 99% for the standard vs. intervention group. There was a statistically significant benefit from apnoeic oxygenation in reducing the frequency of peri-intubation hypoxia (SpO2 < =90%) for patients with initial SpO2 > 95%, p = 0.0001. The other significant benefit was observed in the recovery phase for patients with severe hypoxia prior to intubation., Conclusion: Apnoeic oxygenation did not influence peri-intubation oxygen saturations, but it did reduce the frequency and duration of hypoxia in the post-intubation period. Given that apnoeic oxygenation is a simple low-cost intervention with a low complication rate, and that hypoxia can be detrimental to outcome, application of nasal cannulas during the drug-induced phase of emergency intubation may benefit a subset of patients undergoing emergency anaesthesia.- Published
- 2021
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12. Assignment of pre-event ASA physical status classification by pre-hospital physicians: a prospective inter-rater reliability study.
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Tønsager K, Rehn M, Krüger AJ, Røislien J, and Ringdal KG
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- Anesthesiologists, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Societies, Medical, Emergency Medical Services, Physicians
- Abstract
Background: Individualized treatment is a common principle in hospitals. Treatment decisions are made based on the patient's condition, including comorbidities. This principle is equally relevant out-of-hospital. Furthermore, comorbidity is an important risk-adjustment factor when evaluating pre-hospital interventions and may aid therapeutic decisions and triage. The American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status (ASA-PS) classification system is included in templates for reporting data in physician-staffed pre-hospital emergency medical services (p-EMS) but whether an adequate full pre-event ASA-PS can be assessed by pre-hospital physicians remains unknown. We aimed to explore whether pre-hospital physicians can score an adequate pre-event ASA-PS with the information available on-scene., Methods: The study was an inter-rater reliability study consisting of two steps. Pre-event ASA-PS scores made by pre- and in-hospital physicians were compared. Pre-hospital physicians did not have access to patient records and scores were based on information obtainable on-scene. In-hospital physicians used the complete patient record (Step 1). To assess inter-rater reliability between pre- and in-hospital physicians when given equal amounts of information, pre-hospital physicians also assigned pre-event ASA-PS for 20 of the included patients by using the complete patient records (Step 2). Inter-rater reliability was analyzed using quadratic weighted Cohen's kappa (κ
w )., Results: For most scores (82%) inter-rater reliability between pre-and in-hospital physicians were moderate to substantial (κw 0,47-0,89). Inter-rater reliability was higher among the in-hospital physicians (κw 0,77 to 0.85). When all physicians had access to the same information, κw increased (κw 0,65 to 0,93)., Conclusions: Pre-hospital physicians can score an adequate pre-event ASA-PS on-scene for most patients. To further increase inter-rater reliability, we recommend access to the full patient journal on-scene. We recommend application of the full ASA-PS classification system for reporting of comorbidity in p-EMS.- Published
- 2020
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13. Top five research priorities in physician-provided pre-hospital critical care - appropriate staffing, training and the effect on outcomes.
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Rehn M, Bache KG, Lossius HM, and Lockey D
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- Critical Care, Hospitals, Humans, Research, Workforce, Physicians
- Published
- 2020
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14. A needs assessment of resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) in non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Norway.
- Author
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Brede JR, Kramer-Johansen J, and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Humans, Middle Aged, Norway, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Aorta surgery, Balloon Occlusion, Health Services Needs and Demand, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Resuscitation methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) carries an 86% mortality rate in Norway. Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) is a potential adjunct in management of non-traumatic cardiac arrest and is feasible in pre-hospital setting without compromising standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). However, number of patients potentially eligible for REBOA remain unknown. In preparation for a clinical trial to investigate any benefit of pre-hospital REBOA, we sought to assess the need for REBOA in Norway as an adjunct treatment in OHCA., Methods: Retrospective observational cohort study of data from the Norwegian Cardiac Arrest Registry in the 3-year period 2016-2018. We identified number of patients potentially eligible for pre-hospital REBOA during CPR, defined by suspected non-traumatic origin, age 18-75 years, witnessed arrest, ambulance response time less than 15 min, treated by ambulance personnel and resuscitation effort over 30 min., Results: In the 3-year period, ambulance personnel resuscitated 8339 cases. Of these, a group of 720 patients (8.6%) were eligible for REBOA. Only 18% in this group achieved return of spontaneous circulation and 7% survived for 30 days or more., Conclusion: This national registry data analysis constitutes a needs assessment of REBOA in OHCA. We found that each year approximately 240 patients, or nearly 9% of ambulance treated OHCA, in Norway is potentially eligible for pre-hospital REBOA as an adjunct treatment to standard resuscitation. This needs assessment suggests that there is sufficient patient population in Norway to study REBOA as an adjunct treatment in OHCA.
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- 2020
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15. Template for documenting and reporting data in physician-staffed pre-hospital services: a consensus-based update.
- Author
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Tønsager K, Krüger AJ, Ringdal KG, and Rehn M
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- Attitude of Health Personnel, Consensus, Delphi Technique, Forms and Records Control, Humans, Medical Records, Research Design, Documentation, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Background: Physician-staffed emergency medical services (p-EMS) are resource demanding, and research is needed to evaluate any potential effects of p-EMS. Templates, designed through expert agreement, are valuable and feasible, but they need to be updated on a regular basis due to developments in available equipment and treatment options. In 2011, a consensus-based template documenting and reporting data in p-EMS was published. We aimed to revise and update the template for documenting and reporting in p-EMS., Methods: A Delphi method was applied to achieve a consensus from a panel of selected European experts. The experts were blinded to each other until a consensus was reached, and all responses were anonymized. The experts were asked to propose variables within five predefined sections. There was also an optional sixth section for variables that did not fit into the pre-defined sections. Experts were asked to review and rate all variables from 1 (totally disagree) to 5 (totally agree) based on relevance, and consensus was defined as variables rated ≥4 by more than 70% of the experts., Results: Eleven experts participated. The experts generated 194 unique variables in the first round. After five rounds, a consensus was reached. The updated dataset was an expanded version of the original dataset and the template was expanded from 45 to 73 main variables. The experts approved the final version of the template., Conclusions: Using a Delphi method, we have updated the template for documenting and reporting in p-EMS. We recommend implementing the dataset for standard reporting in p-EMS.
- Published
- 2020
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16. The boundaries of our imagination are not restricted by limits, but by lack of knowledge.
- Author
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Bache KG and Rehn M
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- 2019
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17. Response to: Best practice advice on pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia & advanced airway management.
- Author
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Hagemo JS, Bredmose PP, Stave H, Rehn M, and Buskop C
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- Airway Management, Humans, Air Ambulances, Anesthesia, Anesthesiology, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
The European HEMS and Air ambulance Committee's Medical working group recently published Best Practice advice on pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia and advanced airway management. We believe that this initiative is important. In our opinion however, the competence requirements recommended by the authors do not meet the standards that we should aim for in HEMS services. We argue that pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia should be delivered with a competence level approximating in-hospital standard. In our experience, our patients benefit from pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia delivered by consultants with regular in-hospital rotations and a sound clinical governance system.
- Published
- 2019
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18. Collecting core data in physician-staffed pre-hospital helicopter emergency medical services using a consensus-based template: international multicentre feasibility study in Finland and Norway.
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Tønsager K, Rehn M, Ringdal KG, Lossius HM, Virkkunen I, Østerås Ø, Røislien J, and Krüger AJ
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- Aircraft, Data Collection, Feasibility Studies, Finland, Humans, Norway, Consensus, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Physicians statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Comparison of services and identification of factors important for favourable patient outcomes in emergency medical services (EMS) is challenging due to different organization and quality of data. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the feasibility of physician-staffed EMS (p-EMS) to collect patient and system level data by using a consensus-based template., Methods: The study was an international multicentre observational study. Data were collected according to a template for uniform reporting of data from p-EMS using two different data collection methods; a standard and a focused data collection method. For the standard data collection, data were extracted retrospectively for one year from all FinnHEMS bases and for the focused data collection, data were collected prospectively for six weeks from four selected Norwegian p-EMS bases. Completeness rates for the two data collection methods were then compared and factors affecting completeness rates and template feasibility were evaluated. Standard Chi-Square, Fisher's Exact Test and Mann-Whitney U Test were used for group comparison of categorical and continuous data, respectively, and Kolomogorov-Smirnov test for comparison of distributional properties., Results: All missions with patient encounters were included, leaving 4437 Finnish and 128 Norwegian missions eligible for analysis. Variable completeness rates indicated that physiological variables were least documented. Information on pain and respiratory rate were the most frequently missing variables with a standard data collection method and systolic blood pressure was the most missing variable with a focused data collection method. Completeness rates were similar or higher when patients were considered severely ill or injured but were lower for missions with short patient encounter. When a focused data collection method was used, completeness rates were higher compared to a standard data collection method., Conclusions: We found that a focused data collection method increased data capture compared to a standard data collection method. The concept of using a template for documentation of p-EMS data is feasible in physician-staffed services in Finland and Norway. The greatest deficiencies in completeness rates were evident for physiological parameters. Short missions were associated with lower completeness rates whereas severe illness or injury did not result in reduced data capture.
- Published
- 2019
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19. Seven years since defining the top five research priorities in physician-provided pre-hospital critical care - what did it lead to and where are we now?
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Bache KG, Rehn M, and Thompson J
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- Humans, Biomedical Research, Clinical Competence, Critical Care standards, Emergency Medical Services standards, Health Priorities organization & administration, Physicians standards
- Published
- 2018
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20. Airway management in pre-hospital critical care: a review of the evidence for a 'top five' research priority.
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Crewdson K, Rehn M, and Lockey D
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- Humans, Airway Management, Anesthesia, Critical Care, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
The conduct and benefit of pre-hospital advanced airway management and pre-hospital emergency anaesthesia have been widely debated for many years. In 2011, prehospital advanced airway management was identified as a 'top five' in physician-provided pre-hospital critical care. This article summarises the evidence for and against this intervention since 2011 and attempts to address some of the more controversial areas of this topic.
- Published
- 2018
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21. EHAC medical working group best practice advice on the role of air rescue and pre hospital critical care at major incidents.
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Thompson J, Rehn M, and Sollid SJM
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- Consensus, Critical Care, Humans, Trauma Severity Indices, Advisory Committees, Air Ambulances, Efficiency, Organizational standards, Emergency Medical Services standards, Evidence-Based Practice
- Abstract
Background: Helicopter EMS (HEMS) teams may perform a variety of clinical, managerial and transport functions during major incident management. Despite national and international variations in HEMS systems, the rapid delivery of HEMS personnel with advanced skills in major incident management and clinical scene leadership has been crucial to the delivery of an effective medical response at previous incidents. This document outlines the Best Practice Advice of the European HEMS and Air Ambulance Committee (EHAC) Medical Working Group on how HEMS and Pre Hospital Critical Care teams may maximise the positive impact of their resources in the event of Major Incidents., Methods: Narrative literature review and expert consensus., Results: To ensure a safe, coordinated and effective response, HEMS teams require suitable, proportionate and up to date major incident plans that are integrated into the major incident plans of other regional emergency and healthcare services. Role specific protocols, training and equipment should be adapted to the expected HEMS role in the major incident plan and likely regional threats. System and incident factors will influence HEMS utilisation during the major incident response and can include patient and staff transfer, equipment resupply, aerial assessment, search and rescue, clinical leadership and advanced care. During the recovery phase of a major incident there is a need to ensure restoration of conventional service and address the welfare of involved HEMS personnel. Standardised reporting of major incidents is strongly recommended for clinical governance, legal and research reasons., Conclusions: The rapid delivery of HEMS personnel with advanced skills in Major Incident management and clinical scene leadership is crucial to the delivery of an effective medical response at Major Incidents.
- Published
- 2018
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22. Correction to: Systematic reporting to improve the emergency medical response to major incidents: a pilot study.
- Author
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Hardy S, Fattah S, Wisborg T, Raatiniemi L, Staff T, and Rehn M
- Abstract
Erratum: The original article [1] contains an error whereby all authors' names were mistakenly interchanged. The original article has now been corrected to present the authors' names correctly.
- Published
- 2018
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23. Systematic reporting to improve the emergency medical response to major incidents: a pilot study.
- Author
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Hardy S, Fattah S, Wisborg T, Raatiniemi L, Staff T, and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Communication, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Humans, Pilot Projects, Triage organization & administration, Volunteers, Databases, Factual, Disaster Medicine organization & administration, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Major incidents affect us globally, and are occurring with increasing frequency. There is still no evidence-based standard regarding the best medical emergency response to major incidents. Currently, reports on major incidents are non-standardised and variable in quality. This pilot study examines the first systematic reports from a consensus-based, freely accessible database, aiming to identify how descriptive analysis of reports submitted to this database can be used to improve the major incident response., Methods: Majorincidentreporting.net is a website collecting reports on major incidents using a standardised template. Data from these reports were analysed to compare the emergency response to each incident., Results: Data from eight reports showed that effective triage by experienced individuals and the use of volunteers for transport were notable successes of the major incident response. Inadequate resources, lack of a common triage system, confusion over command and control and failure of communication were reported failures. The following trends were identified: Fires had the slowest times for several aspects of the response and the only three countries to have a single dialling number for all three emergency services had faster response times. Helicopter Emergency Medical services (HEMS) were used for transport and treatment in rural locations and for triage and treatment in urban locations. In two incidents, a major incident was declared before the arrival of the first Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel., Conclusion: This study shows that we can obtain relevant data from major incidents by using systematic reporting. Though the sample size from this pilot study is not large enough to draw any specific conclusions it illustrates the potential for future analyses. Identified lessons could be used to improve the emergency medical response to major incidents.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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24. Developing quality indicators for physician-staffed emergency medical services: a consensus process.
- Author
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Haugland H, Rehn M, Klepstad P, and Krüger A
- Subjects
- Delphi Technique, Quality Improvement, Consensus, Emergency Medical Services standards, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling, Physicians, Quality Indicators, Health Care
- Abstract
Background: There is increasing interest for quality measurement in health care services; pre-hospital emergency medical services (EMS) included. However, attempts of measuring the quality of physician-staffed EMS (P-EMS) are scarce. The aim of this study was to develop a set of quality indicators for international P-EMS to allow quality improvement initiatives., Methods: A four-step modified nominal group technique process (expert panel method) was used., Results: The expert panel reached consensus on 26 quality indicators for P-EMS. Fifteen quality indicators measure quality of P-EMS responses (response-specific quality indicators), whereas eleven quality indicators measure quality of P-EMS system structures (system-specific quality indicators)., Discussion: When measuring quality, the six quality dimensions defined by The Institute of Medicine should be appraised. We argue that this multidimensional approach to quality measurement seems particularly reasonable for services with a highly heterogenic patient population and complex operational contexts, like P-EMS. The quality indicators in this study were developed to represent a broad and comprehensive approach to quality measurement of P-EMS., Conclusions: The expert panel successfully developed a set of quality indicators for international P-EMS. The quality indicators should be prospectively tested for feasibility, validity and reliability in clinical datasets. The quality indicators should then allow for adjusted quality measurement across different P-EMS systems.
- Published
- 2017
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25. Determinants for patient satisfaction regarding aesthetic outcome and skin sensitivity after breast-conserving surgery.
- Author
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Dahlbäck C, Manjer J, Rehn M, and Ringberg A
- Subjects
- Aged, Body Mass Index, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Esthetics, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Skin innervation, Skin Physiological Phenomena, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Treatment Outcome, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Mastectomy, Segmental adverse effects, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Reoperation statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: With the development of new surgical techniques in breast cancer, such as oncoplastic breast surgery, increased knowledge of risk factors for poor satisfaction with conventional breast-conserving surgery (BCS) is needed in order to determine which patients to offer these techniques to. The aim of this study was to investigate patient satisfaction regarding aesthetic result and skin sensitivity in relation to patient, tumour, and treatment factors, in a consecutive sample of patients undergoing conventional BCS., Methods: Women eligible for BCS were recruited between February 1, 2008 and January 31, 2012 in a prospective setup. In all, 297 women completed a study-specific questionnaire 1 year after conventional BCS and radiotherapy. Potential risk factors for poor satisfaction were investigated using logistic regression analysis., Results: The great majority of the women, 84%, were satisfied or very satisfied with the overall aesthetic result. The rate of satisfaction regarding symmetry between the breasts was 68% and for skin sensitivity in the operated breast it was 67%. Excision of more than 20% of the preoperative breast volume was associated with poor satisfaction regarding overall aesthetic outcome, as was axillary clearance. A high BMI (≥30 kg/m
2 ) seemed to affect satisfaction with symmetry negatively. Factors associated with less satisfied patients regarding skin sensitivity in the operated breast were an excision of ≥20% of preoperative breast volume, a BMI of 25-30 kg/m2 , axillary clearance, and radiotherapy. Re-excision and postoperative infection were associated with lower rates of satisfaction regarding both overall aesthetic outcome and symmetry, as well as with skin sensitivity., Conclusions: Several factors affect patient satisfaction after BCS. A major determinant of poor satisfaction in this study was a large excision of breast volume. If the percentage of breast volume excised is estimated to exceed 20%, other techniques, such as oncoplastic breast surgery, with or without contralateral surgery, or mastectomy with reconstruction, may be considered.- Published
- 2016
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26. Implementing a template for major incident reporting: experiences from the first year.
- Author
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Fattah S, Rehn M, and Wisborg T
- Subjects
- Data Collection, Humans, Documentation methods, Medical Errors statistics & numerical data, Risk Management organization & administration
- Abstract
Major incidents are resource-demanding situations that require urgent and effective medical management. The possibility to extract learning from them is therefore important. Comparative analysis of information based on uniform data collection from previous incidents may facilitate learning. The Major Incident Reporting Collaborators have developed a template for reporting of the medical pre-hospital response to major incidents. The template is accompanied by an open access webpage ( www.majorincidentreporting.org ) for online reporting and access to published reports. This commentary presents the experiences from the first year of implementing the template including a presentation of the five published reports.
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
27. Post-infection symptoms following two large waterborne outbreaks of Cryptosporidium hominis in Northern Sweden, 2010-2011.
- Author
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Rehn M, Wallensten A, Widerström M, Lilja M, Grunewald M, Stenmark S, Kark M, and Lindh J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Child, Child, Preschool, Cryptosporidium, Female, Humans, Infant, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden epidemiology, Young Adult, Arthralgia epidemiology, Cryptosporidiosis complications, Cryptosporidiosis epidemiology, Diarrhea epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks
- Abstract
Background: In 2010-2011, two large waterborne outbreaks caused by Cryptosporidium hominis affected two cities in Sweden, Östersund and Skellefteå. We investigated potential post-infection health consequences in people who had reported symptoms compatible with cryptosporidiosis during the outbreaks using questionnaires., Methods: We compared cases linked to these outbreaks with non-cases in terms of symptoms present up to eleven months after the initial infection. We examined if cases were more likely to report a list of symptoms at follow-up than non-cases, calculating odds ratios (OR) and 95 % confidence intervals (CI) obtained through logistic regression., Results: A total of 872 (310 cases) and 743 (149 cases) individuals responded to the follow-up questionnaires in Östersund and Skellefteå respectively. Outbreak cases were more likely to report diarrhea (Östersund OR: 3.3, CI: 2.0-5.3. Skellefteå OR: 3.6, CI: 2.0-6.6), watery diarrhea (Östersund OR: 3.4, CI: 1.9-6.3. Skellefteå OR: 2.8, CI: 1.5-5.1) abdominal pain (Östersund OR: 2.1, CI: 1.4-3.3, Skellefteå OR: 2.7, CI: 1.5-4.6) and joint pain (Östersund OR: 2.0, CI: 1.2-3.3, Skellefteå OR: 2.0, CI: 1.1-3.6) at follow-up compared to non-cases., Conclusions: Our findings suggest that gastrointestinal- and joint symptoms can persist several months after the initial infection with Cryptosporidium and should be regarded as a potential cause of unexplained symptoms in people who have suffered from the infection.
- Published
- 2015
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28. The representativeness of a European multi-center network for influenza-like-illness participatory surveillance.
- Author
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Cantarelli P, Debin M, Turbelin C, Poletto C, Blanchon T, Falchi A, Hanslik T, Bonmarin I, Levy-Bruhl D, Micheletti A, Paolotti D, Vespignani A, Edmunds J, Eames K, Smallenburg R, Koppeschaar C, Franco AO, Faustino V, Carnahan A, Rehn M, and Colizza V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Population Surveillance, Prevalence, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Health Status, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Internet
- Abstract
Background: The Internet is becoming more commonly used as a tool for disease surveillance. Similarly to other surveillance systems and to studies using online data collection, Internet-based surveillance will have biases in participation, affecting the generalizability of the results. Here we quantify the participation biases of Influenzanet, an ongoing European-wide network of Internet-based participatory surveillance systems for influenza-like-illness., Methods: In 2011/2012 Influenzanet launched a standardized common framework for data collection applied to seven European countries. Influenzanet participants were compared to the general population of the participating countries to assess the representativeness of the sample in terms of a set of demographic, geographic, socio-economic and health indicators., Results: More than 30,000 European residents registered to the system in the 2011/2012 season, and a subset of 25,481 participants were selected for this study. All age classes (10 years brackets) were represented in the cohort, including under 10 and over 70 years old. The Influenzanet population was not representative of the general population in terms of age distribution, underrepresenting the youngest and oldest age classes. The gender imbalance differed between countries. A counterbalance between gender-specific information-seeking behavior (more prominent in women) and Internet usage (with higher rates in male populations) may be at the origin of this difference. Once adjusted by demographic indicators, a similar propensity to commute was observed for each country, and the same top three transportation modes were used for six countries out of seven. Smokers were underrepresented in the majority of countries, as were individuals with diabetes; the representativeness of asthma prevalence and vaccination coverage for 65+ individuals in two successive seasons (2010/2011 and 2011/2012) varied between countries., Conclusions: Existing demographic and national datasets allowed the quantification of the participation biases of a large cohort for influenza-like-illness surveillance in the general population. Significant differences were found between Influenzanet participants and the general population. The quantified biases need to be taken into account in the analysis of Influenzanet epidemiological studies and provide indications on populations groups that should be targeted in recruitment efforts.
- Published
- 2014
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29. Rapid extrication of entrapped victims in motor vehicle wreckage using a Norwegian chain method - cross-sectional and feasibility study.
- Author
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Fattah S, Johnsen AS, Andersen JE, Vigerust T, Olsen T, and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Communication, Cooperative Behavior, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emergency Medical Services methods, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Norway, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Accidents, Traffic, Firefighters education, Occupational Health, Patient Safety, Rescue Work methods
- Abstract
Background: Road traffic injury (RTI) is a global problem causing some 1,2 million deaths annually and another 20-50 million people sustain non-fatal injuries. Pre-hospital entrapment is a risk factor for complications and delays transport to the hospital. The Rapid Extrication (RE) method combines winching and cutting of both front poles and utilising two larger vehicles to pull car wreckage apart to extricate patients. A previous study indicates that RE is an efficient alternative to previously existing methods., Methods: All Fire Departments in Norway were questioned on: background, frequency of training, use and implementation of the method, protocol and equipment. Times used for extrication from motor vehicle wreckage were measured at the National Championship in RE. Questionnaires presented to participants asked about frequency of training, inter-disciplinary cooperation and self-perceived safety for both providers and patients on a 1-7 Likert scale (1 - worst and 7 - best)., Results: Participating Fire Departments use RE in 95% of cases on passenger cars and 77% of cases on larger vehicles. Teams participating in the National Championship scored self-perceived security of crew as median 7 and IQR (6, 7), patient safety 7 (6, 7), communication between personnel 7 (6, 7), teamwork 7 (6, 7), and how well the technique functioned 7 (6, 7).All teams had extricated and transported the patient into the ambulance within 20 minutes., Conclusion: Interdisciplinary and regular training of RE can lead to safe extrication of a critically injured patient in less than 20 minutes and may be life saving.
- Published
- 2014
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30. Quality improvement in pre-hospital critical care: increased value through research and publication.
- Author
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Rehn M and Krüger AJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomedical Research, Critical Care standards, Emergency Medical Services standards, Organizational Culture, Publications standards, Quality Improvement trends, Total Quality Management methods
- Abstract
Pre-hospital critical care is considered to be a complex intervention with a weak evidence base. In quality improvement literature, the value equation has been used to depict the inevitable relationship between resources expenditure and quality. Increased value of pre-hospital critical care involves moving a system from quality assurance to quality improvement. Agreed quality indicators can be integrated in existing quality improvement and complex intervention methodology. A QI system for pre-hospital critical care includes leadership involvement, multi-disciplinary buy-in, data collection infrastructure and long-term commitment. Further, integrating process control with governance systems allows evidence-based change of practice and publishing of results.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
31. A consensus based template for reporting of pre-hospital major incident medical management.
- Author
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Fattah S, Rehn M, Lockey D, Thompson J, Lossius HM, and Wisborg T
- Subjects
- Humans, Norway, Consensus, Documentation standards, Emergencies, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Group Processes, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Structured reporting of major incidents has been advocated to improve the care provided at future incidents. A systematic review identified ten existing templates for reporting major incident medical management, but these templates are not in widespread use. We aimed to address this challenge by designing an open access template for uniform reporting of data from pre-hospital major incident medical management that will be tested for feasibility., Methods: An expert group of thirteen European major incident practitioners, planners or academics participated in a four stage modified nominal group technique consensus process to design a novel reporting template. Initially, each expert proposed 30 variables. Secondly, these proposals were combined and each expert prioritized 45 variables from the total of 270. Thirdly, the expert group met in Norway to develop the template. Lastly, revisions to the final template were agreed via e-mail., Results: The consensus process resulted in a template consisting of 48 variables divided into six categories; pre-incident data, Emergency Medical Service (EMS) background, incident characteristics, EMS response, patient characteristics and key lessons., Conclusions: The expert group reached consensus on a set of key variables to report the medical management of pre-hospital major incidents and developed a novel reporting template. The template will be freely available for downloading and reporting on http://www.majorincidentreporting.org. This is the first global open access database for pre-hospital major incident reporting. The use of a uniform dataset will allow comparative analysis and has potential to identify areas of improvement for future responses.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Improving adjustments for older age in pre-hospital assessment and care.
- Author
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Rehn M
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Cause of Death, Humans, Norway, Point-of-Care Systems, Quality Improvement, Risk Factors, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Triage organization & administration, Wounds and Injuries
- Abstract
Population estimates projects a significant increase in the geriatric population making elderly trauma patients more common. The geriatric trauma patients experience higher incidence of pre-existing medical conditions, impaired age-dependent physiologic reserve, use potent drugs and suffer from trauma system related shortcomings that influence outcomes. To improve adjustments for older age in pre-hospital assessment and care, several initiatives should be implemented. Decision-makers should make system revisions and introduce advanced point-of-care initiatives to improve outcome after trauma for the elderly.
- Published
- 2013
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33. Major incident preparedness and on-site work among Norwegian rescue personnel - a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Fattah S, Krüger AJ, Andersen JE, Vigerust T, and Rehn M
- Abstract
Background: A major incident has occurred when the number of live casualties, severity, type of incident or location requires extraordinary resources. Major incident management is interdisciplinary and involves triage, treatment and transport of patients. We aimed to investigate experiences within major incident preparedness and management among Norwegian rescue workers., Methods: A questionnaire was answered by 918 rescue workers across Norway. Questions rated from 1 (doesn't work) to 7 (works excellently) are presented as median and range., Results: Health-care personnel constituted 34.1% of the participants, firefighters 54.1% and police 11.8%. Training for major incident response scored 5 (1, 7) among health-care workers and 4 (1, 7) among firefighters and police. Preparedness for major incident response scored 5 (1, 7) for all professions. Interdisciplinary cooperation scored 5 (3, 7) among health-care workers and police and 5 (1, 7) among firefighters. Among health-care workers, 77.5% answered that a system for major-incident triage exists; 56.3% had triage equipment available. The majority - 45.1% of health-care workers, 44.7% of firefighters and 60.4% of police - did not know how long it would take to get emergency stretchers to the scene., Conclusions: Rescue personnel find major incident preparedness and on-scene multidisciplinary cooperation to function well. Some shortcomings are reported with regard to systems for major incident triage, tagging equipment for triage and knowledge about access to emergency stretchers.
- Published
- 2012
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34. Calculating trauma triage precision: effects of different definitions of major trauma.
- Author
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Lossius HM, Rehn M, Tjosevik KE, and Eken T
- Abstract
Background: Triage is the process of classifying patients according to injury severity and determining the priority for further treatment. Although the term "major trauma" represents the reference against which over- and undertriage rates are calculated, its definition is inconsistent in the current literature. This study aimed to investigate the effects of different definitions of major trauma on the calculation of perceived over- and undertriage rates in a Norwegian trauma cohort., Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of patients included in the trauma registry of a primary, referral trauma centre. Two "traditional" definitions were developed based on anatomical injury severity scores (ISS >15 and NISS >15), one "extended" definition was based on outcome (30-day mortality) and mechanism of injury (proximal penetrating injury), one "extensive" definition was based on the "extended" definition and on ICU resource consumption (admitted to the ICU for >2 days and/or transferred intubated out of the hospital in ≤2 days), and an additional four definitions were based on combinations of the first four., Results: There were no significant differences in the perceived under- and overtriage rates between the two "traditional" definitions (NISS >15 and ISS >15). Adding "extended" and "extensive" to the "traditional" definitions also did not significantly alter perceived under- and overtriage. Defining major trauma only in terms of the mechanism of injury and mortality, with or without ICU resource consumption (the "extended" and "extensive" groups), drastically increased the perceived overtriage rates., Conclusion: Although the proportion of patients who were defined as having sustained major trauma increased when NISS-based definitions were substituted for ISS-based definitions, the outcomes of the triage precision calculations did not differ significantly between the two scales. Additionally, expanding the purely anatomic definition of major trauma by including proximal penetrating injury, 30-day mortality, ICU LOS greater than 2 days and transferred intubated out of the hospital at ≤2 days did not significantly influence the perceived triage precision. We recommend that triage precision calculations should include anatomical injury scaling according to NISS. To further enhance comparability of trauma triage calculations, researchers should establish a consensus on a uniform definition of major trauma.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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35. Oslo government district bombing and Utøya island shooting July 22, 2011: the immediate prehospital emergency medical service response.
- Author
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Sollid SJ, Rimstad R, Rehn M, Nakstad AR, Tomlinson AE, Strand T, Heimdal HJ, Nilsen JE, and Sandberg M
- Subjects
- Geography, Government, Humans, Norway, Transportation of Patients, Triage, Wounds, Gunshot therapy, Bombs, Emergency Medical Services, Firearms, Mass Casualty Incidents
- Abstract
Background: On July 22, 2011, a single perpetrator killed 77 people in a car bomb attack and a shooting spree incident in Norway. This article describes the emergency medical service (EMS) response elicited by the two incidents., Methods: A retrospective and observational study was conducted based on data from the EMS systems involved and the public domain. The study was approved by the Data Protection Official and was defined as a quality improvement project., Results: We describe the timeline and logistics of the EMS response, focusing on alarm, dispatch, initial response, triage and evacuation. The scenes in the Oslo government district and at Utøya island are described separately., Conclusions: Many EMS units were activated and effectively used despite the occurrence of two geographically separate incidents within a short time frame. Important lessons were learned regarding triage and evacuation, patient flow and communication, the use of and need for emergency equipment and the coordination of helicopter EMS.
- Published
- 2012
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36. Prognostic models for the early care of trauma patients: a systematic review.
- Author
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Rehn M, Perel P, Blackhall K, and Lossius HM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Prognosis, Wounds and Injuries diagnosis, Wounds and Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Background: Early identification of major trauma may contribute to timely emergency care and rapid transport to an appropriate health-care facility. Several prognostic trauma models have been developed to improve early clinical decision-making., Methods: We systematically reviewed models for the early care of trauma patients that included 2 or more predictors obtained from the evaluation of an adult trauma victim, investigated their quality and described their characteristics., Results: We screened 4,939 records for eligibility and included 5 studies that derivate 5 prognostic models and 9 studies that validate one or more of these models in external populations. All prognostic models intended to change clinical practice, but none were tested in a randomised clinical trial. The variables and outcomes were valid, but only one model was derived in a low-income population. Systolic blood pressure and level of consciousness were applied as predictors in all models., Conclusions: The general impression is that the models perform well in predicting survival. However, there are many areas for improvement, including model development, handling of missing data, analysis of continuous measures, impact and practicality analysis.
- Published
- 2011
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37. A concept for major incident triage: full-scaled simulation feasibility study.
- Author
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Rehn M, Andersen JE, Vigerust T, Krüger AJ, and Lossius HM
- Subjects
- Accidents, Traffic, Cooperative Behavior, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Manikins, Norway, Professional Competence, Emergency Medical Service Communication Systems organization & administration, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Mass Casualty Incidents, Patient Simulation, Triage organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Efficient management of major incidents involves triage, treatment and transport. In the absence of a standardised interdisciplinary major incident management approach, the Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation developed Interdisciplinary Emergency Service Cooperation Course (TAS). The TAS-program was established in 1998 and by 2009, approximately 15 500 emergency service professionals have participated in one of more than 500 no-cost courses. The TAS-triage concept is based on the established triage Sieve and Paediatric Triage Tape models but modified with slap-wrap reflective triage tags and paediatric triage stretchers. We evaluated the feasibility and accuracy of the TAS-triage concept in full-scale simulated major incidents., Methods: The learners participated in two standardised bus crash simulations: without and with competence of TAS-triage and access to TAS-triage equipment. The instructors calculated triage accuracy and measured time consumption while the learners participated in a self-reported before-after study. Each question was scored on a 7-point Likert scale with points labelled "Did not work" (1) through "Worked excellent" (7)., Results: Among the 93 (85%) participating emergency service professionals, 48% confirmed the existence of a major incident triage system in their service, whereas 27% had access to triage tags. The simulations without TAS-triage resulted in a mean over- and undertriage of 12%. When TAS-Triage was used, no mistriage was found. The average time from "scene secured to all patients triaged" was 22 minutes (range 15-32) without TAS-triage vs. 10 minutes (range 5-21) with TAS-triage. The participants replied to "How did interdisciplinary cooperation of triage work?" with mean 4,9 (95% CI 4,7-5,2) before the course vs. mean 5,8 (95% CI 5,6-6,0) after the course, p < 0,001., Conclusions: Our modified triage Sieve tool is feasible, time-efficient and accurate in allocating priority during simulated bus accidents and may serve as a candidate for a future national standard for major incident triage.
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
38. Inter-hospital transfer: the crux of the trauma system, a curse for trauma registries.
- Author
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Lossius HM, Kristiansen T, Ringdal KG, and Rehn M
- Subjects
- Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Humans, Registries, Triage organization & administration, Patient Transfer organization & administration, Trauma Centers organization & administration
- Abstract
The inter-hospital transfer of patients is crucial to a well functioning trauma system, and the transfer process may serve as a quality indicator for regional trauma care. However, the assessment of the transfer process requires high-quality data from various sources. Prospective studies and studies based on single-centre trauma registries may fail to capture an appropriate width and depth of data. Thus the creation of inclusive regional and national trauma registries that receive information from all of the services within a trauma system is a prerequisite for high quality inter-hospital transfer studies in the future.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Precision of field triage in patients brought to a trauma centre after introducing trauma team activation guidelines.
- Author
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Rehn M, Eken T, Krüger AJ, Steen PA, Skaga NO, and Lossius HM
- Subjects
- Aged, Emergency Medical Services, Female, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Trauma Centers, Triage standards
- Abstract
Background: Field triage is important for regional trauma systems providing high sensitivity to avoid that severely injured are deprived access to trauma team resuscitation (undertriage), yet high specificity to avoid resource over-utilization (overtriage). Previous informal trauma team activation (TTA) at Ulleval University Hospital (UUH) caused imprecise triage. We have analyzed triage precision after introduction of TTA guidelines., Methods: Retrospective analysis of 7 years (2001-07) of prospectively collected trauma registry data for all patients with TTA or severe injury, defined as at least one of the following: Injury Severity Score (ISS) > 15, proximal penetrating injury, admitted ICU > 2 days, transferred intubated to another hospital within 2 days, dead from trauma within 30 days. Interhospital transfers to UUH and patients admitted by non-healthcare personnel were excluded. Overtriage is the fraction of TTA where patients are not severely injured (1-positive predictive value); undertriage is the fraction of severely injured admitted without TTA (1-sensitivity)., Results: Of the 4,659 patients included in the study, 2,221 (48%) were severely injured. TTA occurred 4,440 times, only 2,002 of which for severely injured (overtriage 55%). Overall undertriage was 10%. Mechanism of injury was TTA criterion in 1,508 cases (34%), of which only 392 were severely injured (overtriage 74%). Paramedic-manned prehospital services provided 66% overtriage and 17% undertriage, anaesthetist-manned services 35% overtriage and 2% undertriage. Falls, high age and admittance by paramedics were significantly associated with undertriage. A Triage-Revised Trauma Score (RTS) < 12 in the emergency department reduced the risk for undertriage compared to RTS = 12 (normal value). Field RTS was documented by anaesthetists in 64% of the patients compared to 33% among paramedics.Patients subject to undertriage had an ISS-adjusted Odds Ratio for 30-day mortality of 2.34 (95% CI 1.6-3.4, p < 0.001) compared to those correctly triaged to TTA., Conclusion: Triage precision had not improved after TTA guideline introduction. Anaesthetists perform precise trauma triage, whereas paramedics have potential for improvement. Skewed mission profiles makes comparison of differences in triage precision difficult, but criteria or the use of them may contribute. Massive undertriage among paramedics is of grave concern as patients exposed to undertriage had increased risk of dying.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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