Effects of physician-based emergency medical service dispatch in severe traumatic brain injury on prehospital run time

Author(s)
Franschman, G.; Verburg, N.; Brens-Heldens, V.; Andriessen, T.M.J.C.; Naalt, J. van der; Peerdeman, S.M.; Valk, J.P.; Hoogerwerf, N.; Greuters, S.; Schober, P.; Vos, P.E.; Christiaans, H.M.T.; Boer, C.
Year

Prehospital care by physician-based helicopter emergency medical services (P-HEMS) may prolong total prehospital run time. This has raised an issue of debate about the benefits of these services in traumatic brain injury (TBI). We therefore investigated the effects of P-HEMS dispatch on prehospital run time and outcome in severe TBI.
Prehospital run times of 497 patients with severe TBI who were solely treated by a paramedic EMS (n = 125) or an EMS/P-HEMS combination (n = 372) were retrospectively analyzed. Other study parameters included the injury severity score (ISS), Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), prehospital endotracheal intubation and predicted and observed outcome rates.
Results of the study showed that patients who received P-HEMS care were younger and had higher ISS values than solely EMS-treated patients (10%; P = 0.04). The overall prehospital run time was 74 ± 54 min, with similar out-of-hospital times for EMS and P-HEMS treated patients. Prehospital endotracheal intubation was more frequently performed in the P-HEMS group (88%) than in the EMS group (35%; P < 0.001). The prehospital run time for intubated patients was similar for P-HEMS (66 (51–80) min) and EMS-treated patients (59 (41–88 min). Unexpectedly, mortality probability scores and observed outcome scores were less favourable for EMS-treated patients when compared to patients treated by P-HEMS.
The study concludes that P-HEMS dispatch does not increase prehospital run times in severe TBI, while it assures prehospital intubation of TBI patients by a well-trained physician. Our data however suggest that a subgroup of the most severely injured patients received prehospital care by an EMS, while international guidelines recommend advanced life support by a physician-based EMS in these cases.

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Pages
1838-1842
Published in
Injury
43 (11)
Library number
20220207 ST [electronic version only]

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