Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa

Introduction: The skill of endotracheal intubation to achieve a definitive airway for critically ill and injured patients in the prehospital setting is frequently performed by advanced life support providers. Several methods may be utilised, including intubation without the use of medication, the us...

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Main Author: Burke, Jan
Other Authors: Hendrikse, Clint
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Health Sciences 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32596
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-325962021-01-22T05:21:38Z Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa Burke, Jan Hendrikse, Clint Wylie, Craig Emergency Medicine Introduction: The skill of endotracheal intubation to achieve a definitive airway for critically ill and injured patients in the prehospital setting is frequently performed by advanced life support providers. Several methods may be utilised, including intubation without the use of medication, the use of sedatives or a rapid sequence intubation. There is a paucity of data available that assesses prehospital advanced airway intubation practices in South Africa. The aim of this study is to describe the advanced airway management practices of advanced life support providers across South Africa. Methods: A retrospective, observational study method was used (chart review). Electronic patient care records were sourced from private and public emergency medical services companies and collated accordingly. Results: A total of 704 cases were included. Intubation during cardiac arrest was the most common approach to airway management (n=280, 40%) followed by rapid sequence intubation (n=202, 28%), medication-facilitated intubations (n=152, 22%) and a nomedication approach (n=70, 10%). Successful intubation using an endotracheal tube was reported in 197 (98%) of rapid sequence intubation cases, 134 (88%) of the medication facilitated cases, 61 (87%) of no-medication cases and 228 (81%) of cardiac arrest cases. A first-pass success rate was described in 260 (79%) cases, with the cardiac arrest group having a first-pass success of 85%, followed by the rapid sequence intubation group (83%), the nomedication group (71%) and the medication facilitated group (61%). Hypotension and cardiac arrest were the most common adverse events. A total of 496 (70%) patients were alive at hospital handover. The average scene time and transportation time was 42 minutes and 24 minutes respectively for the rapid sequence intubation group, 42min and 27min for the medication facilitated group, 44min and 25min for the no-medication group and 57min and 16min for the cardiac arrest group. Discussion: The study described the prehospital airway management practices by advanced life support providers in South Africa. Rapid sequence intubation had the highest endotracheal intubation success rate overall and the lowest prevalence of adverse events. There was no statistical difference in survival between the rapid sequence intubation, medication facilitated and no-medication group. Due to a lack in standardised treatment guidelines, differences in fluid administration, post-intubation care, confirmation of placement and ventilation were noted. No standard approach to record keeping was found, with the quality of patient care records being variable. A standardised advanced airway management report would be beneficial as it would improve the quality of data recorded and allow for better comparisons to be made. 2021-01-20T12:55:27Z 2021-01-20T12:55:27Z 2020_ 2021-01-04T12:30:29Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32596 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Division of Emergency Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Emergency Medicine
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Burke, Jan
Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
description Introduction: The skill of endotracheal intubation to achieve a definitive airway for critically ill and injured patients in the prehospital setting is frequently performed by advanced life support providers. Several methods may be utilised, including intubation without the use of medication, the use of sedatives or a rapid sequence intubation. There is a paucity of data available that assesses prehospital advanced airway intubation practices in South Africa. The aim of this study is to describe the advanced airway management practices of advanced life support providers across South Africa. Methods: A retrospective, observational study method was used (chart review). Electronic patient care records were sourced from private and public emergency medical services companies and collated accordingly. Results: A total of 704 cases were included. Intubation during cardiac arrest was the most common approach to airway management (n=280, 40%) followed by rapid sequence intubation (n=202, 28%), medication-facilitated intubations (n=152, 22%) and a nomedication approach (n=70, 10%). Successful intubation using an endotracheal tube was reported in 197 (98%) of rapid sequence intubation cases, 134 (88%) of the medication facilitated cases, 61 (87%) of no-medication cases and 228 (81%) of cardiac arrest cases. A first-pass success rate was described in 260 (79%) cases, with the cardiac arrest group having a first-pass success of 85%, followed by the rapid sequence intubation group (83%), the nomedication group (71%) and the medication facilitated group (61%). Hypotension and cardiac arrest were the most common adverse events. A total of 496 (70%) patients were alive at hospital handover. The average scene time and transportation time was 42 minutes and 24 minutes respectively for the rapid sequence intubation group, 42min and 27min for the medication facilitated group, 44min and 25min for the no-medication group and 57min and 16min for the cardiac arrest group. Discussion: The study described the prehospital airway management practices by advanced life support providers in South Africa. Rapid sequence intubation had the highest endotracheal intubation success rate overall and the lowest prevalence of adverse events. There was no statistical difference in survival between the rapid sequence intubation, medication facilitated and no-medication group. Due to a lack in standardised treatment guidelines, differences in fluid administration, post-intubation care, confirmation of placement and ventilation were noted. No standard approach to record keeping was found, with the quality of patient care records being variable. A standardised advanced airway management report would be beneficial as it would improve the quality of data recorded and allow for better comparisons to be made.
author2 Hendrikse, Clint
author_facet Hendrikse, Clint
Burke, Jan
author Burke, Jan
author_sort Burke, Jan
title Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
title_short Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
title_full Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
title_fullStr Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: A retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in South Africa
title_sort prehospital advanced airway management practices by advanced life support providers: a retrospective observational study of emergency medical service providers in south africa
publisher Faculty of Health Sciences
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32596
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