An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre

Introduction: Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) is a time-sensitive emergency which requires prompt identification and emergency care in order to reduce morbidity and mortality. The first step in recognising OHCA is rapid identification by the emergency dispatch centre. Identification of such pa...

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Main Author: van Rensburg, Louis Chris
Other Authors: Stassen, Willem
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Health Sciences 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33089
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-330892021-03-05T05:11:26Z An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre van Rensburg, Louis Chris Stassen, Willem Claassen, Joel Clinical Emergency Care Introduction: Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) is a time-sensitive emergency which requires prompt identification and emergency care in order to reduce morbidity and mortality. The first step in recognising OHCA is rapid identification by the emergency dispatch centre. Identification of such patients remains challenging in South Africa due to multiple languages and widely differing levels of education. This study aimed to identify the key descriptors (words and phrases) of OHCA used by callers speaking Afrikaans when contacting the emergency dispatch centre of the Western Cape Provincial Emergency Medical Services (WC-EMS). Methodology: Computer-aided dispatch (CAD) data with a corresponding “patient unresponsive” incident type were drawn for a 12 month period (January – December 2018). Corresponding patient care records were extracted to verify OHCA. The original voice recordings between the caller and emergency call taker at the time of the emergency were extracted and transcribed verbatim. Transcriptions were subjected to inductive, qualitative content analysis to the manifest level. Descriptors of OHCA in Afrikaans calls were coded, categorised and quantified. Results: A total of 729 confirmed OHCA cases were identified, of which 36 (5%) were in Afrikaans and eligible for analysis. Following content analysis, 83 distinct codes in six categories were identified. The most prevalent categories were descriptors related to Respiratory Effort (apnoea and difficulty in breathing; 30.1%) (30.1%), Clinical Features (related to the eyes, mouth and body temperature; 20.4%) and Cardiac Activity (pulselessness; 16.8%). Conclusion Afrikaans Callers within the Western Cape province of South Africa use consistent descriptors when requesting and ambulance for OHCA. Future studies should focus on describing descriptors for other languages commonly spoken in the province, and to develop and validate telephonic OHCA recognition algorithms. 2021-03-03T02:08:32Z 2021-03-03T02:08:32Z 2020_ 2021-03-02T16:26:13Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33089 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Division of Emergency Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical Emergency Care
spellingShingle Clinical Emergency Care
van Rensburg, Louis Chris
An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
description Introduction: Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) is a time-sensitive emergency which requires prompt identification and emergency care in order to reduce morbidity and mortality. The first step in recognising OHCA is rapid identification by the emergency dispatch centre. Identification of such patients remains challenging in South Africa due to multiple languages and widely differing levels of education. This study aimed to identify the key descriptors (words and phrases) of OHCA used by callers speaking Afrikaans when contacting the emergency dispatch centre of the Western Cape Provincial Emergency Medical Services (WC-EMS). Methodology: Computer-aided dispatch (CAD) data with a corresponding “patient unresponsive” incident type were drawn for a 12 month period (January – December 2018). Corresponding patient care records were extracted to verify OHCA. The original voice recordings between the caller and emergency call taker at the time of the emergency were extracted and transcribed verbatim. Transcriptions were subjected to inductive, qualitative content analysis to the manifest level. Descriptors of OHCA in Afrikaans calls were coded, categorised and quantified. Results: A total of 729 confirmed OHCA cases were identified, of which 36 (5%) were in Afrikaans and eligible for analysis. Following content analysis, 83 distinct codes in six categories were identified. The most prevalent categories were descriptors related to Respiratory Effort (apnoea and difficulty in breathing; 30.1%) (30.1%), Clinical Features (related to the eyes, mouth and body temperature; 20.4%) and Cardiac Activity (pulselessness; 16.8%). Conclusion Afrikaans Callers within the Western Cape province of South Africa use consistent descriptors when requesting and ambulance for OHCA. Future studies should focus on describing descriptors for other languages commonly spoken in the province, and to develop and validate telephonic OHCA recognition algorithms.
author2 Stassen, Willem
author_facet Stassen, Willem
van Rensburg, Louis Chris
author van Rensburg, Louis Chris
author_sort van Rensburg, Louis Chris
title An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
title_short An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
title_full An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
title_fullStr An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the Afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a Western Cape Emergency Control centre
title_sort analysis of the afrikaans telephonic descriptors of cardiac arrest in a western cape emergency control centre
publisher Faculty of Health Sciences
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33089
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